| Literature DB >> 35281304 |
Benjamin Lardinois1, Leïla Belkhir2, Alexia Verroken1.
Abstract
Helicobacter canis, an enterohepatic Helicobacter, has proven its role in human diseases and has been rediscussed in recent years as its zoonotic potential is increasingly described. Routine microbiological detection of this pathogen is a difficult task as its culture may fail due to fastidious growth. It is therefore supposed that many clinical laboratories under-recognize H. canis infections. A review of all clinical and microbiological literature currently available from previous relevant H. canis human clinical cases, mainly bacteremia, added with a clinical case observed at the Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc, was performed. Clinical features of H. canis reports show the presence of underlying clinical conditions in 89% of the cases, bacteremia in 83%, associated fever in 58%, and recent close contact with pets in 83%, especially dogs. The observed microbiological trends from 10 cases of bacteremia were a median of 4 days until positive blood culture bottle detection, subcultures showing a thin layer of small colonies under microaerophilic atmosphere at 35-42°C after 3-4 days of growth, and an identification requiring 16S rRNA sequencing given the difficulties observed with MALDI-TOF MS. Low MICs were observed for penicillins, amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, carbapenems, and metronidazole in opposition to high MICs for ciprofloxacin. A frequent association of H. canis and bacteremia in immunocompromised patients with recurrent fever in contact with pets, especially dogs, was identified. Considering the fastidious growing capacities, final identification from blood cultures may not be expected before 7 days. Intravenous ceftriaxone, oral doxycycline, or metronidazole has been suggested as efficient therapeutic choices.Entities:
Keywords: Helicobacter canis; bacteremia; bacteriology; clinical features; mini-review; susceptibility testing
Year: 2022 PMID: 35281304 PMCID: PMC8905544 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.814944
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Previous and current microbiological investigations of H. canis isolated from blood cultures.
| Author | Detection in blood bottle | Time to detection | Microscopic examination | Positive subcultures | Time to grow | Colonies aspect | Identification | AST | Treatment | Outcome | |
| Lardinois et al. (Current report) | 1 out of 4 (1 AE) | 3 days | Gram negative and spiral-shaped rods | Columbia, chocolate, MacConkey and Karmali agar | 3–5 days | Thin layer with a cloud-like appearance in the medium | 16S rRNA sequencing on subculture | Ceftriaxone i.v. for 6 weeks. | Bacteriological and clinical cure | ||
| AM = 0.064 | CM = 2 | ||||||||||
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| 2 out of 4 (2AE) | 5 days | Gram negative spiral rods | Columbia sheep agar | 2 days | Shiny translucent colonies of round or irregular shape | 16S rRNA sequencing and MALDI-TOF MS on subculture | Ceftriaxone i.v. and peroral doxycycline for 14 days | Bacteriological and clinical cure | ||
| A/C = 0.016 (S) | GM = 0.064 | ||||||||||
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| 2 out of 2 (2 Peds) | 6 days | Thin, curved Gram-negative bacilli | 7 days | Not reported | 16S rRNA sequencing on subculture | Not reported | Cefotaxime i.v. and Metronidazole I.V. | Brain death | ||
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| 4 out of 4 (4 AE) | 5 days | Small, curved Gram-negative rods | Sheep blood agar | 3 days | Small and tan | 16S rRNA sequencing on subculture | Not performed | Doxycycline for 7 days then peroral Amoxicillin-clavulanate for 8 weeks | Bacteriological and clinical cure | |
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| 1 out of 6 (1 ANA) | 3 days | Unusual, slightly curved, gram negative rods | Failed to grow | Not reported | Not reported | 16S rRNA sequencing on blood bottle | Not performed | Cefuroxime for 3 days then Ciprofloxacin for 10 days | Bacteriological and clinical cure | |
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| 4 bottles out of 6 (4 AE) | 4 days | Rod-like organisms after acridine orange stain | Chocolate blood agar | 2–3 days | Thin and oily film | 16S rRNA sequencing and MALDI-TOF MS on subculture | Not performed | Oral doxycycline for 6 weeks and ceftriaxone i.v. for 2 weeks | Bacteriological and clinical cure | |
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| 1st episode: 2 out of 4 (2 AE) 2nd episode: 3 out of 4 (2 AE and 1 ANA) | 2 days | Unusual, spiral Gram-negative rods | Failed to grow | Not reported | Not reported | 16S rRNA sequencing on blood bottle. | Not performed | Cefuroxime for 3 days then peroral amoxicillin, omeprazole, and clarithromycin for 4 weeks | Bacteriological and clinical cure | |
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| 1 pediatric bottle | 5 days | Small, Gram-negative spiral rods, 2–3 mm long | 5% sheep blood, chocolate and Brucella agar. Best with 5% horse blood agar plates with yeast extract | 4 days | Very small | 16S rRNA sequencing on subculture | Cephalothin 30 μg (R) | Ampicillin and gentamicin i.v. then peroral mecillinam for 10 days | Clinical recurrence | |
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| 1 out of 4 (1 AE) | 3 days | Spiral-shaped bacteria on acridine orange staining | Brucella agar supplemented with hemin, vitamin K1, cysteine, and 5% sheep blood | Not mentioned | Small and grayish | 16S rRNA sequencing on subculture |
| Amoxicillin-clavulanate for 10 days then ceftriaxone i.v. | Clinical recurrence then bacteriological and clinical cure | |
| Amoxicillin = 0.38 | IMI = 0.047 | ||||||||||
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| 2 out of 10 (2 AE) | Not mentioned | Gram-negative spiral organism | Tryptic soy agar with 5% sheep blood and chocolate agar. | 3–4 days | Not mentioned | 16S rRNA sequencing on subculture | Not performed | Ampicillin i.v, Gentamicin i.v. and Ciprofloxacin then doxycycline and Metronidazole for 5 months | Clinical recurrence then bacteriological and clinical cure | |
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AE, aerobic; A/C, amoxicillin-clavulanate; AM, ampicillin; ANA, anaerobic; AST, antimicrobial susceptibility testing; CI, ciprofloxacin; CM, clindamycin; CTX, cefotaxime; CRO, ceftriaxone; GM, gentamicin; IMI, imipenem; I.V., intravenous; MALDI-TOF, matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry; MIC, minimal inhibitory concentration; MP, meropenem; MZ, metronidazole; P/T, piperacillin-tazobactam; R, resistant; rRNA, ribosomal ribonucleic acid; RI, rifampicin; S, susceptible; TC, tetracycline. *See
Clinical features of previous and current Helicobacter canis reports.
| Variables | % or Min–max | |
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| Adults | 9 | 75 |
| Female | 6 | 50 |
| Age (years) | 46.5 | 0.2–78.0 |
| Underlying conditions in adults ( | 8 | 89 |
| Immunosuppressors | 5 | 56 |
| ESRD | 3 | 33 |
| Splenectomized | 2 | 22 |
| Others | 5 | 56 |
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| Fever | 7 | 58 |
| Skin abnormalities | 4 | 33 |
| Digestive symptoms | 4 | 33 |
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| Bacteremia | 10 | 83 |
| WBC at hospitalization (×109/L) | 10.350 | 7.900–15.000 |
| CRP at hospitalization (mg/dl) | 7.7 | 0–9.4 |
| Close contact with pets | 10 | 83 |
| Dog | 8 | 67 |
| Cat | 4 | 33 |
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| Cephalosporin based antibiotherapy | 7 | 58 |
| In-hospital time (days) | 5 | 3–15 |
| Fatal outcome | 1 | 8 |