1258 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
cyclase-hemolysin toxin, which impairs host phagocytic cell function;
dermonecrotic toxin, which may contribute to respiratory mucosal
damage; and lipooligosaccharide, which has properties similar to those
of other gram-negative bacterial endotoxins. Since 2010, the emergence of pertactin-negative strains has been observed worldwide, and
these strains now predominate in some regions, perhaps from immune
pressure resulting from the use of pertactin-containing acellular pertussis vaccines.
■ EPIDEMIOLOGY
Pertussis is a highly communicable disease, with attack rates of
80–100% among unimmunized household contacts and 20% within
households in well-immunized populations. The infection has a worldwide distribution, with cyclical outbreaks every 3–5 years (a pattern
that has persisted despite widespread immunization). Pertussis occurs
in all months; however, in North America, its activity peaks in autumn
and winter.
In developing countries, pertussis remains an important cause of
infant morbidity and death. The reported incidence of pertussis worldwide has decreased as a result of improved vaccine coverage (Fig. 160-1).
However, coverage rates are still <60% in many developing nations; the
World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 90% of the burden
of pertussis is in developing regions. In addition, over-reporting of
immunization coverage and under-reporting of disease result in substantial underestimation of the global burden of pertussis. The WHO
estimates that there were 161,000 deaths from pertussis among children <5 years of age in 2014.
Before the institution of widespread immunization programs in the
developed world, pertussis was one of the most common infectious
causes of morbidity and death. In the United States before the 1940s,
between 115,000 and 270,000 cases of pertussis were reported annually,
with an average yearly rate of 150 cases per 100,000 population. With
universal childhood immunization, the number of reported cases fell
by >90%, and mortality rates decreased even more dramatically. Only
1010 cases of pertussis were reported in 1976 (Fig. 160-2). After that
historic low, rates of pertussis increased slowly. In recent years, pertussis epidemics have been reported with increasing frequency in highincome countries, including Australia, the United Kingdom, and the 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
0
0.5M
1M
Immunization coverage (%)
Number of cases
1.5M
2M
Pertussis global annual reported cases and DTP3 coverage 1980-2019
Number of cases Official coverage WHO/UNICEF estimates
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
FIGURE 160-1 Global annual reported cases of pertussis and rate of coverage with DTP3 (diphtheria toxoid, tetanus toxoid, and pertussis vaccine; 3 doses), 1980–2019.
(Reproduced from www.who.int/immunization/monitoring_surveillance/burden/vpd/surveillance_type/passive/pertussis_coverage_2019.jpg. World Health Organization;
2019. License: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO. Accessed June 4, 2021.)
United States. The United States experienced widespread outbreaks of
pertussis in 2005, 2010, 2012, and 2014 at levels not seen in 40–50 years
(48,000 reported cases in 2012).
Although thought of as a disease of childhood, pertussis can affect
people of all ages and is a known cause of prolonged coughing illness
in adolescents and adults. In unimmunized populations, pertussis incidence peaks during the preschool years, and well over half of children
have the disease before reaching adulthood. In highly immunized populations such as those in North America, the peak incidence is among
infants <1 year of age who have not completed the three-dose primary
immunization series. An increase in pertussis incidence among adolescents and adults began in the late 1990s and led to the introduction
of an adolescent booster dose across North America by 2006. While
the disease burden among adolescents decreased initially, children
7–10 years of age emerged as a high-risk group during a major outbreak in 2010. Most of the affected children were fully immunized.
Subsequent outbreaks in 2012 and 2014 showed a shift in epidemiology, with pertussis incidence increasing among adolescents while
still remaining elevated among 10-year-olds. The most highly affected
cohorts were those who received acellular pertussis vaccines in infancy.
Although adults contribute a smaller proportion of reported cases
of pertussis than do children and adolescents, this difference may be
related to a greater degree of under-recognition and under-reporting.
A number of studies of prolonged coughing illness suggest that B. pertussis may be the etiologic agent in 12–30% of adults with cough that
does not improve within 2 weeks. In one study of the efficacy of an
acellular pertussis vaccine in adolescents and adults, the incidence of
pertussis in the placebo group was 3.7–4.5 cases per 1000 person-years.
Although this prospective cohort study yielded a lower estimate than
the studies of cough illness, its results still translate to ~1 million cases
of pertussis annually among adults in the United States. In addition,
asymptomatic pertussis infection is common and appears to contribute
to disease transmission.
Severe morbidity and high mortality rates, however, are restricted
almost entirely to infants. In the United States between 2008 and
2011, 83% of pertussis deaths involved infants ≤3 months and >35%
of infants with pertussis required hospitalization. Although school-age
children are the source of infection for most households, adults are
1259CHAPTER 160 Pertussis and Other Bordetella Infections
0
10000
20000
30000
40000
50000
60000
1976 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001 2006 2011 2016
Number of reported cases
Year
FIGURE 160-2 Reported cases of pertussis by year—United States, 1976–2019. (From the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, www.cdc.gov/pertussis/
surv-reporting/cases-by-year.html. Accessed June 4, 2021.)
often the source for cases in high-risk infants and may serve as the
reservoir of infection between epidemic years.
■ PATHOGENESIS
Infection with B. pertussis is initiated by attachment of the organism to
the ciliated epithelial cells of the nasopharynx. Attachment is mediated
by surface adhesins (e.g., pertactin and filamentous hemagglutinin),
which bind to the integrin family of cell-surface proteins, probably
in conjunction with pertussis toxin. The role of fimbriae in adhesion
and in maintenance of infection has not been fully delineated. Perhaps
the result of redundancy of adhesins, no differences in virulence or
clinical manifestations have been detected with the emergence of
pertactin-negative strains. At the site of attachment, the organism
multiplies, producing a variety of other toxins that cause local mucosal
damage (tracheal cytotoxin, dermonecrotic toxin). Impairment of host
defense by B. pertussis is mediated by pertussis toxin and adenylate
cyclase-hemolysin toxin. There is local cellular invasion, with intracellular bacterial persistence; however, systemic dissemination does not
occur. Systemic manifestations (lymphocytosis) result from the effects
of the toxins.
The pathogenesis of the clinical manifestations of pertussis is poorly
understood. It is not known what causes the hallmark paroxysmal
cough. A pivotal role for pertussis toxin has been proposed but has
not been confirmed. It is thought that neurologic events in pertussis,
such as seizures and encephalopathy, are due to hypoxia from coughing paroxysms or apnea rather than to the effects of specific bacterial
products. B. pertussis pneumonia, which occurs in up to 10% of infants
with pertussis, is usually a diffuse bilateral primary infection. In older
children and adults with pertussis, pneumonia is often due to secondary bacterial infection with streptococci or staphylococci. Deaths from
pertussis among young infants are frequently associated with very high
levels of leukocytosis and pulmonary hypertension.
■ IMMUNITY
Both humoral and cell-mediated immunity are thought to be important in pertussis. Although immunity after natural infection was
thought to be lifelong, seroepidemiologic evidence demonstrates that
it is not and that subsequent episodes of clinical pertussis are prevented
by intermittent subclinical infection. Pertussis agglutinins were correlated with protection in early studies of whole-cell pertussis vaccines.
Antibodies to pertussis toxin, filamentous hemagglutinin, pertactin,
and fimbriae are all protective in animal models. Serologic correlates
of protection conferred by acellular pertussis vaccines have not been
established, although antibody to pertactin, fimbriae, and (to a lesser
degree) pertussis toxin correlated best with protection in two efficacy
trials. The duration of immunity after whole-cell pertussis vaccination
is short-lived, with little protection remaining after 10–12 years. Waning of immunity is even more rapid in adolescents and children who
have received all of their immunizations with acellular vaccines—i.e.,
within 2–4 years after the fifth or sixth dose. The type of immune
response elicited may have an effect on duration of protection; natural
infection and whole-cell pertussis vaccine elicit a Th1/Th17-predominant response whereas acellular pertussis vaccines stimulate a Th2-
biased response.
■ CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
Pertussis is a prolonged coughing illness with clinical manifestations
that vary by age (Table 160-1). Although not uncommon among adolescents and adults, classic pertussis is most often seen in preschool and
school-age children. After an incubation period averaging 7–10 days,
an illness develops that is indistinguishable from the common cold and
is characterized by coryza, lacrimation, mild cough, low-grade fever,
and malaise. After 1–2 weeks, this catarrhal phase evolves into the
paroxysmal phase: the cough becomes more frequent and spasmodic
with repetitive bursts of 5–10 coughs, often within a single expiration.
Post-tussive vomiting is frequent, with a mucous plug occasionally
expelled at the end of an episode. The episode may be terminated by an
audible whoop, which occurs upon rapid inspiration against a closed
glottis at the end of a paroxysm. During a spasm, there may be impressive neck-vein distension, bulging eyes, tongue protrusion, and cyanosis. Paroxysms may be precipitated by noise, eating, or physical contact.
TABLE 160-1 Clinical Features of Pertussis, by Age Group and
Diagnostic Status
PERCENTAGE OF PATIENTS
FEATURE
ADOLESCENTS AND
ADULTS INFANTS AND CHILDREN
Cough
Paroxysmal 70–99 89–93
Worse at night 61–87 41
Whoop 8–82 69–92
Post-tussive vomiting 17–65 48–60
Source: Republished with permission of American Society for Microbiology from
Pertussis: Microbiology, disease, treatment, and prevention, PE Kilgore et al: 29:449,
2016; permission conveyed through Copyright Clearance Center, Inc.
1260 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
Between attacks, the patient’s appearance is normal, but increasing
fatigue is evident. The frequency of paroxysmal episodes varies widely,
from several per hour to 5–10 per day. Episodes are often worse at night
and interfere with sleep. Most complications occur during the paroxysmal stage. Fever is uncommon and suggests bacterial superinfection.
After 2–4 weeks, the coughing episodes become less frequent and
less severe—changes heralding the onset of the convalescent phase. This
phase can last 1–3 months and is characterized by gradual resolution of
coughing episodes. For 6–12 months, intercurrent viral infections may
be associated with a recrudescence of paroxysmal cough.
Not all individuals who develop pertussis have classic disease. The
clinical manifestations in adolescents and adults are more often atypical. The cough is severe, prolonged, and often paroxysmal. Though
uncommon, a whoop and vomiting with cough are more specific signs
of pertussis in adults with prolonged cough. Other suggestive features
are a cough at night, sweating episodes between paroxysms of coughing, and exposure to other individuals with a prolonged coughing
illness.
■ COMPLICATIONS
Complications are frequently associated with pertussis and are more
common among infants than among older children or adults. Subconjunctival hemorrhages, abdominal and inguinal hernias, pneumothoraces, and facial and truncal petechiae can result from increased
intrathoracic pressure generated by severe fits of coughing. Weight loss
can follow decreased caloric intake. Urinary incontinence, rib fracture,
carotid artery aneurysm, and cough syncope have also been reported
in adolescents and adults with pertussis. In a series of more than 1100
children <2 years of age who were hospitalized with pertussis, 27.1%
had apnea, 9.4% had pneumonia, 2.6% had seizures, and 0.4% had
encephalopathy; 10 children (0.9%) died. Pneumonia is reported in
<5% of adolescents and adults and increases in frequency after 50 years
of age. In contrast to the primary B. pertussis pneumonia that develops
in infants, pneumonia in adolescents and adults with pertussis is usually caused by a secondary infection with encapsulated organisms such
as Streptococcus pneumoniae or Haemophilus influenzae.
■ DIAGNOSIS
If the classic symptoms of pertussis are present, clinical diagnosis is
not difficult. However, particularly in older children and adults, it is
difficult to differentiate infections caused by B. pertussis and B. parapertussis from other respiratory tract infections on clinical grounds.
Therefore, laboratory confirmation should be attempted in all cases.
Lymphocytosis (absolute lymphocyte count >108
–109
/L) is common
among young children, in whom it is unusual with other infections,
but not among adolescents and adults. Culture of nasopharyngeal
secretions remains the gold standard of diagnosis because of its 100%
specificity, although DNA detection by PCR has replaced culture in
many laboratories because of substantially increased sensitivity and
quicker results. Appropriate PCR methodology must include primers
to differentiate among B. pertussis, B. parapertussis, and B. holmesii. The best specimen is collected by nasopharyngeal aspiration, in
which a fine flexible plastic catheter attached to a 10-mL syringe is
passed into the nasopharynx and withdrawn while gentle suction is
applied. Since B. pertussis is highly sensitive to drying, secretions for
culture should be inoculated without delay onto appropriate medium
(Bordet-Gengou or Regan-Lowe), or the catheter should be flushed
with a phosphate-buffered saline solution for culture and/or PCR. An
alternative to the aspirate is a Dacron or rayon nasopharyngeal swab;
again, inoculation of culture plates should be immediate or an appropriate transport medium (e.g., Regan-Lowe charcoal medium) should
be used. Results of PCR can be available within hours; cultures become
positive by day 5 of incubation.
Nasopharyngeal cultures in untreated pertussis remain positive
for a mean of 3 weeks after the onset of illness; these cultures become
negative within 5 days of the institution of appropriate antimicrobial
therapy. The duration of a positive PCR in untreated pertussis or after
therapy is not known but exceeds that of positive cultures. Since much
of the period during which the organism can be recovered from the
nasopharynx falls into the catarrhal phase, when the etiology of the
infection is not suspected, there is only a small window of opportunity
for culture-proven diagnosis. Cultures from infants and young children
are more frequently positive than those from older children and adults;
this difference may reflect earlier presentation of the former age group
for medical care. Direct fluorescent antibody tests of nasopharyngeal
secretions for direct diagnosis may still be available in some laboratories but should not be used because of poor sensitivity and specificity.
As a result of the difficulties with laboratory diagnosis of pertussis
in adolescents, adults, and patients who have been symptomatic for
>4 weeks, increasing attention is being given to serologic diagnosis.
Enzyme immunoassays detecting IgA and IgG antibodies to pertussis
toxin, filamentous hemagglutinin, pertactin, and fimbriae have been
developed and assessed for reproducibility. Two- or fourfold increases
in antibody titer are suggestive of pertussis, although cross-reactivity
of some antigens (such as filamentous hemagglutinin and pertactin)
among Bordetella species makes it difficult to depend diagnostically
on seroconversion involving a single type of antibody. Criteria for
serologic diagnosis based on comparison of results for a single serum
specimen with established population values are gaining acceptance,
and serologic measurement of antibody to pertussis toxin is becoming
more widely standardized and available for diagnostic purposes, particularly in outbreak settings and for surveillance.
■ DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
A child presenting with paroxysmal cough, post-tussive vomiting, and
whoop is likely to have an infection caused by B. pertussis or B. parapertussis; lymphocytosis increases the likelihood of a B. pertussis etiology.
Viruses such as respiratory syncytial virus, rhinovirus, and adenovirus
have been isolated from patients with clinical pertussis but probably
represent co-infection, particularly in children <1 year of age.
In adolescents and adults, who often do not have paroxysmal cough
or whoop, the differential diagnosis of a prolonged coughing illness is
more extensive. Pertussis should be suspected when any patient has a
cough that does not improve within 14 days, a paroxysmal cough of
any duration, a cough followed by vomiting (adolescents and adults),
or any respiratory symptoms after contact with a laboratory-confirmed
case of pertussis. Other etiologies to consider include infections caused
by Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydia pneumoniae, adenovirus,
influenza virus, and other respiratory viruses. Use of angiotensinconverting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, reactive airway disease, and gastroesophageal reflux disease are well-described noninfectious causes of
prolonged cough in adults.
TREATMENT
Pertussis
ANTIBIOTICS
The purpose of antibiotic therapy for pertussis is to eradicate the
infecting bacteria from the nasopharynx; therapy does not substantially alter the clinical course unless given early in the catarrhal
phase. Macrolide antibiotics are the drugs of choice for treatment of
pertussis (Table 160-2); macrolide-resistant B. pertussis strains have
been reported but are rare. Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole is recommended as an alternative for individuals allergic to macrolides.
SUPPORTIVE CARE
Young infants have the highest rates of complication and death
from pertussis; therefore, most infants (and older children with
severe disease) should be hospitalized. A quiet environment may
decrease the stimulation that can trigger paroxysmal episodes. Use
of β-adrenergic agonists and/or glucocorticoids has been advocated
by some authorities but has not been proven to be effective. Cough
suppressants are not effective and play no role in the management
of pertussis.
INFECTION CONTROL MEASURES
Hospitalized patients with pertussis should be placed in respiratory
isolation, with the use of precautions appropriate for pathogens
1261CHAPTER 161 Diseases Caused by Gram-Negative Enteric Bacilli
spread by large respiratory droplets. Isolation should continue for
5 days after initiation of macrolide therapy or, in untreated patients,
for 3 weeks (i.e., until nasopharyngeal cultures are consistently
negative).
■ PREVENTION
Chemoprophylaxis Because the risk of transmission of B. pertussis within households is high, chemoprophylaxis is widely recommended for household contacts of pertussis cases regardless of their
immunization status and should be initiated within 21 days of cough
onset in the index case. The effectiveness of chemoprophylaxis is
supported by several epidemiologic studies of institutional and community outbreaks. In the only randomized, placebo-controlled study,
erythromycin estolate (50 mg/kg per day; maximum dose, 1 g/d) was
effective in reducing the incidence of bacteriologically confirmed pertussis by 67%; however, there was no decrease in the incidence of clinical disease. Despite these results, authorities continue to recommend
chemoprophylaxis, particularly in households with members at high
risk of severe disease (children <1 year of age, pregnant women). Data
on the use of the newer macrolides for chemoprophylaxis are not available, but these drugs are commonly used because of their increased
tolerability and their effectiveness.
Immunization (See also Chap. 123) The mainstay of pertussis
prevention is active immunization. Pertussis vaccine became widely
used in North America after 1940; the reported number of pertussis
cases subsequently fell by >90%. Whole-cell pertussis vaccines are prepared through the heating, chemical inactivation, and purification of
whole B. pertussis organisms. Despite their efficacy (average estimate,
85%; range for different products, 30–100%), whole-cell pertussis
vaccines are associated with adverse events—both common (fever;
injection-site pain, erythema, and swelling; irritability) and uncommon (febrile seizures, hypotonic-hyporesponsive episodes). Alleged
associations of whole-cell pertussis vaccine with encephalopathy,
sudden infant death syndrome, and autism, although not substantiated, spawned an active anti-immunization lobby. The development
of acellular pertussis vaccines, which are effective and less reactogenic,
has greatly alleviated concerns about the inclusion of pertussis vaccine
in the combined infant immunization series.
Although a wide variety of acellular pertussis vaccines were developed, only a few are still marketed widely; all contain pertussis toxoid
and filamentous hemagglutinin. One acellular pertussis vaccine also
contains pertactin, and another contains pertactin and two types of
fimbriae. Adult formulations of acellular pertussis vaccines have been
shown to be safe, immunogenic, and efficacious in clinical trials in
adolescents and adults and are now recommended for routine immunization of these groups in several countries.
Although whole-cell vaccines are still used extensively in developing
regions of the world, acellular pertussis vaccines are used exclusively
for childhood immunization in much of the developed world. In light
of evidence of early waning of immunity among children who received
acellular pertussis vaccine in infancy, the WHO Strategic Advisory
Group of Experts (SAGE) recommends that countries using whole-cell
pertussis vaccine for the primary infant immunization series continue
to do so. In countries using acellular pertussis vaccines in infancy, additional booster immunizations in older children, adolescents, and adults
are recommended to prevent pertussis in high-risk infants. Pertussis
immunization is also recommended during pregnancy to increase passive transfer of maternal antibodies to the fetus. Studies in high-income
countries demonstrate that immunization of women during pregnancy
is 90–93% effective at preventing pertussis in infants <2 months of age
and is safe. In North America, acellular pertussis vaccines for children
are given as a three-dose primary series at 2, 4, and 6 months of age,
with a reinforcing dose at 15–18 months of age and a booster dose at
4–6 years of age. Adolescents (11–18 years of age) and all unvaccinated
adults should receive a dose of the adult-formulation diphtheria–
tetanus–acellular pertussis vaccine. Immunization is specifically recommended for health care providers, individuals in close contact with
infants, and women during the third trimester of every pregnancy. Pertussis vaccine coverage among U.S. adolescents was 86.4% in 2015, and
coverage among pregnant women was 48.8% in 2015–2016. However,
coverage among adults remains low (23.1% in 2015). Further improvements in adult vaccine coverage may permit better control of pertussis
across the age spectrum, with collateral protection of infants too young
to be immunized. However, more effective vaccines with longer-lasting
protection will ultimately be needed to control this disease.
■ FURTHER READING
De Serres G et al: Morbidity of pertussis in adolescents and adults.
J Infect Dis 182:174, 2000.
Forsyth KD et al: Recommendations to control pertussis prioritized
relative to economies: A Global Pertussis Initiative update. Vaccine
36:7270, 2018.
Havers FP et al: Use of tetanus toxoid, reduced diphtheria toxoid, and
acellular pertussis vaccines: Updated recommendations of the Advisory
Committee on Immunization Practices—United States, 2019. MMWR
Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 69:77, 2020.
Kilgore PE et al: Pertussis: Microbiology, disease, treatment, and prevention. Clin Microbiol Rev 29:449, 2016.
Skoff TH: Sources of infant pertussis infection in the United States.
Pediatrics 136:635, 2015.
Winter K et al: Pertussis in California: A tale of 2 epidemics. Pediatr
Infect Dis J 37:324, 2018.
TABLE 160-2 Antimicrobial Therapy for Pertussis
DRUG ADULT DAILY DOSE FREQUENCY DURATION, DAYS COMMENTS
Erythromycin estolate 500 mg 3–4 times per day 7–14 Frequent gastrointestinal side effects
Clarithromycin 500 mg Twice a day 7 —
Azithromycin 500 mg on day 1, 250 mg subsequently 1 daily dose 5 —
Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole 160 mg of trimethoprim, 800 mg of
sulfamethoxazole
Twice a day 14 For patients allergic to macrolides; data on
effectiveness limited
Source: T Tiwari et al: Recommended antimicrobial agents for the treatment and postexposure prophylaxis of pertussis: 2005 CDC guidelines. MMWR Recomm Rep
54(RR-14):1, 2005.
GENERAL FEATURES AND PRINCIPLES
The post-antibiotic era has begun. For most people, this is the first
time in their lives that an effective treatment for a bacterial infection
may not exist. The Enterobacteriaceae are at the forefront of this evolving public health crisis. For example, the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) and the World Health Organization (WHO)
have designated carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) as
representing a threat level of “urgent” and “priority one, critical.”
161 Diseases Caused by
Gram-Negative Enteric
Bacilli
Thomas A. Russo, James R. Johnson
1262 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
Enterobacteriaceae are responsible for a significant proportion of
the deaths attributed to antimicrobial-resistant bacteria, of which an
estimated 23,000 and 25,000 occur annually in the United States and
the European Union, respectively, and three to five times as many (per
capita) in low- and middle-income countries (e.g., Thailand). These
pathogens cause a wide variety of infections involving diverse anatomic sites in both healthy and compromised hosts. Therefore, a thorough knowledge of clinical presentations and appropriate therapeutic
choices is necessary for optimal outcomes. Escherichia coli, Klebsiella,
Proteus, Enterobacter, Serratia, Citrobacter, Morganella, Providencia,
Cronobacter, and Edwardsiella are enteric gram-negative bacilli (GNB)
within the family Enterobacteriaceae that commonly cause extraintestinal infections. Salmonella, Shigella, and Yersinia, which also are in the
family Enterobacteriaceae but more commonly cause gastrointestinal
infections, are discussed in Chaps. 165, 166, and 171, respectively.
■ EPIDEMIOLOGY
E. coli, Klebsiella, Proteus, Enterobacter, Serratia, Citrobacter, Morganella, Providencia, Cronobacter, and Edwardsiella are components of
the normal animal and human colonic microbiota and/or the microbiota in various environmental habitats, including long-term-care facilities (LTCFs) and hospitals. As a result, except for certain pathotypes
of intestinal pathogenic E. coli, these genera are global pathogens. The
incidence of infection due to these agents is increasing because of
the combination of an aging population and increasing antimicrobial
resistance. In healthy humans, E. coli is the predominant species of
GNB in the colonic microbiota, followed by Klebsiella and Proteus.
GNB (primarily E. coli, Klebsiella, and Proteus) can also colonize the
oropharynx and intact skin but, in healthy individuals, tend to do so
only transiently. By contrast, in LTCFs and hospital settings, a variety of GNB emerge as the dominant colonizers of both mucosal and
skin epithelial surfaces, particularly in association with antimicrobial
use, severe illness, and extended length of stay. LTCFs are emerging
as an important reservoir for resistant GNB. Such colonization with
GNB may lead to subsequent extraintestinal infection; for example,
oropharyngeal colonization may lead to pneumonia, and colonic/
perineal colonization may lead to urinary tract infection (UTI). The
use of ampicillin or amoxicillin was associated with an increased risk
of subsequent infection due to the hypervirulent pathotype of Klebsiella
pneumoniae in Taiwan; this association suggests that changes in the
quantity or prevalence of colonizing bacteria may significantly influence the risk of infection. Serratia, Enterobacter, and, less commonly,
Citrobacter infection may be acquired directly through a variety of
infusates (e.g., medications, blood products, non–U.S. Food and Drug
Administration [FDA] approved stem cell products). Edwardsiella
infections are acquired through freshwater and marine environment
exposures and are most common in Southeast Asia.
■ STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION
Enteric GNB possess an extracytoplasmic outer membrane consisting
of a lipid bilayer with associated proteins, lipoproteins, and polysaccharides (capsule, lipopolysaccharide). The outer membrane interfaces
with the external environment, including the human host. A variety of
components of the outer membrane are critical determinants in pathogenesis (e.g., capsule) and antimicrobial resistance (e.g., permeability
barrier, efflux pumps). In addition, secreted products play an important role in both host infection (e.g., iron acquisition molecules) and
environmental niche survival and colonization (e.g., type VI secretion
systems).
■ PATHOGENESIS
Multiple bacterial virulence factors are required for the pathogenesis
of infections caused by GNB. Possession of specialized virulence genes
defines pathogens and enables them to infect the host efficiently. Hosts
and their cognate pathogens have been co-adapting throughout evolutionary history. During the host–pathogen “chess match” over time,
various and redundant strategies have emerged in both the pathogens
and their hosts (Table 161-1).
TABLE 161-1 Interactions of Extraintestinal Pathogenic Escherichia
coli with the Human Host: A Paradigm for Extracellular, Extraintestinal
Gram-Negative Bacterial Pathogens
BACTERIAL GOAL HOST OBSTACLE BACTERIAL SOLUTION
Extraintestinal
attachment
Flow of urine, mucociliary
escalator
Multiple adhesins (e.g., type
1, S, and F1C fimbriae; P pili)
Nutrient acquisition
for growth
Nutrient sequestration
(e.g., iron via
intracellular storage and
extracellular scavenging
via lactoferrin and
transferrin)
Cellular lysis (e.g.,
hemolysin), multiple
mechanisms for competing
for iron (e.g., siderophores)
and other nutrients
Initial avoidance of
host bactericidal
activity
Complement, phagocytic
cells, antimicrobial
peptides
Capsular polysaccharide,
lipopolysaccharide
Dissemination (within
host and between
hosts)
Intact tissue barriers Irritant tissue damage
resulting in increased
excretion (e.g., toxins such
as hemolysin), invasion of
brain endothelium
Late avoidance of
host bactericidal
activity
Acquired immunity (e.g.,
specific antibodies),
treatment with antibiotics
Cell entry, acquisition of
antimicrobial resistance
Intestinal pathogenic (diarrheagenic) mechanisms are discussed
below. The members of the Enterobacteriaceae family that cause
extraintestinal infections are primarily extracellular pathogens and
therefore share certain pathogenic features. The two principal components of host defense against Enterobacteriaceae, regardless of species,
are innate immunity (including intact skin and mucosal barriers; the
withholding of nutrients; and the activities of complement, antimicrobial peptides, and professional phagocytes) and humoral immunity.
Both susceptibility to and severity of infection are increased with dysfunction or deficiencies of these host components. By contrast, the virulence traits of intestinal pathogenic E. coli—i.e., the distinctive strains
that can cause diarrheal disease—are for the most part different from
those of extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC) and other GNB that
cause extraintestinal infections. This distinction reflects site-specific
differences in host environments, defense mechanisms, and physiological derangements that lead to disease.
A given enterobacterial strain usually possesses multiple adhesins
for binding to a variety of host cells (e.g., in E. coli: type 1, S, and
F1C fimbriae; P pili). Nutrient acquisition (e.g., of iron via siderophores) requires many genes that are necessary but not sufficient for
pathogenesis. The ability to resist the bactericidal activity of complement and phagocytes in the absence of antibody (e.g., as conferred by
capsule or the O antigen component of lipopolysaccharide) is one of
the defining traits of an extracellular pathogen. Tissue damage (e.g., as
mediated by E. coli hemolysin) may facilitate nutrient acquisition and
spread within the host. Without doubt, many important virulence
genes await identification.
The ability to induce septic shock is another defining feature of these
genera. GNB are the most common causes of this potentially lethal
syndrome. Pathogen-associated molecular pattern molecules (PAMPs;
e.g., the lipid A moiety of lipopolysaccharide) stimulate a proinflammatory host response via pattern recognition receptors (e.g., Toll-like
or C-type lectin receptors) that activate host defense signaling pathways;
if overly exuberant, this response results in shock (Chap. 304). Direct
bacterial damage of host tissue (e.g., by toxins) or collateral damage
from the host response can result in the release of damage-associated
molecular pattern molecules (DAMPs; e.g., HMGB1) that can propagate a detrimental proinflammatory host response.
Many antigenic variants (serotypes) exist in most genera of GNB.
For example, E. coli has >150 O (somatic) antigens, 80 K (capsular)
antigens, and 53 H (flagellar) antigens. This antigenic variability, which
permits immune evasion and allows recurrent infection by different
strains of the same species, has impeded vaccine development
(Chap. 123).
1263CHAPTER 161 Diseases Caused by Gram-Negative Enteric Bacilli
■ INFECTIOUS SYNDROMES
Depending on both the host and the pathogen, GNB can infect
nearly every organ or body cavity. E. coli can cause either intestinal
or extraintestinal infection, depending on the particular pathotype,
and Edwardsiella tarda can cause both intestinal and extraintestinal
infection. Klebsiella causes primarily extraintestinal infection, but a
toxin-producing variant of Klebsiella oxytoca has been associated with
hemorrhagic colitis, and Providencia alcalifaciens and Escherichia
albertii have been associated with gastroenteritis.
E. coli and—to a lesser degree—Klebsiella account for most extraintestinal infections due to GNB. These species (for K. pneumoniae,
primarily its hypervirulent pathotype) are the most virulent pathogens
within this group, as demonstrated by their ability to cause severe
infections in healthy, ambulatory hosts from the community. However,
the other genera of GNB are also important extraintestinal pathogens,
especially among LTCF residents and hospitalized patients, in large
part because of the intrinsic or acquired antimicrobial resistance
of these organisms and the increasing number of individuals with
compromised host defenses. The mortality rate is substantial in many
GNB infections and correlates with severity of illness, underlying host
status, and in some cases the antimicrobial resistance of the infecting
pathogen, which can result in suboptimal therapy. Especially problematic are pneumonia, sepsis, and septic shock (arising from any site of
infection), for which the associated mortality rates are 20–60%.
■ DIAGNOSIS
Isolation of GNB from sterile sites almost always implies infection,
whereas their isolation from nonsterile sites, particularly open wounds
and the respiratory tract, requires clinical correlation to differentiate
colonization from infection. Clinical microbiology laboratories are
increasingly incorporating newer diagnostic methodologies (e.g.,
matrix-assisted laser desorption–ionization–time-of-flight mass spectrometry [MALDI-TOF-MS] and polymerase chain reaction [PCR])
and immunoassays to enhance the sensitivity, accuracy, and rapidity
of reporting on pathogen identification and resistance genes. This
information can be used to increase the timeliness of initiation and/
or the accurate selection of empirical antimicrobial therapy, thereby
improving outcomes.
TREATMENT
Principles Guiding Treatment in the Era of
Increasing Antimicrobial Resistance
(See also Chap. 144) Initiation of appropriate empirical antimicrobial therapy early in the course of infections due to GNB
(particularly the more serious ones) leads to improved outcomes.
The ever-increasing prevalence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) and
extensively drug-resistant (XDR) GNB; the lag between published
and current resistance rates; and variations in antimicrobial susceptibility by species, geographic location, regional antimicrobial use,
and hospital site (e.g., intensive care units [ICUs] vs wards) necessitate familiarity with evolving patterns of antimicrobial resistance
for the selection of appropriate empirical therapy.
Patient factors predictive of resistance in a given isolate include
recent antimicrobial use, a health care association (e.g., recent or
ongoing hospitalization, dialysis, residence in an LTCF, transplant,
hematologic malignancy), or international travel (e.g., to Asia, Latin
America, Africa, Eastern Europe). Resistance rates will almost certainly increase over time and will likely be higher than shown here
by the time this chapter is published. Of concern are an increasing
number of reports on resistant Enterobacteriaceae causing infections in ambulatory patients without known risk factors.
In this era of increasing antimicrobial resistance, it is critical to
culture the primary site of infection before initiating antimicrobial
therapy and, for systemically ill patients, to obtain blood cultures.
In vitro testing may not always detect antimicrobial resistance;
therefore, it is important to assess the patient’s clinical response to
treatment. Moreover (see discussion of AmpC β-lactamases below),
resistance may emerge during therapy. In addition, drainage of
abscesses, resection of necrotic tissue, and removal of infected foreign bodies, sometimes referred to collectively as “source control,”
are often required for cure.
For appropriately selected patients, it may be prudent initially,
pending antimicrobial susceptibility results, to use two potentially
active agents as a way to increase the likelihood that at least one
agent will be active against the patient’s organism. If broad-spectrum
treatment has been initiated, it is important to switch to the most
appropriate narrower-spectrum agent once antimicrobial susceptibility results become available. Such responsible antimicrobial
stewardship should help disrupt the ever-escalating cycle of selection for increasingly resistant bacteria, plus decrease the likelihood
of Clostridioides difficile infection, decrease costs, and maximize
the useful longevity of available antimicrobial agents. Likewise, it is
important to avoid treatment of patients who are colonized but not
infected (e.g., who have a positive sputum culture without evidence
of pneumonia, or a positive urine culture without clinical manifestations of UTI).
At present, the most reliably and broadly active antimicrobial agents
in vitro against Enterobacteriaceae are the carbapenems (excepting
imipenem, to which the Proteeae [Proteus, Morganella, Providencia]
are intrinsically resistant); the aminoglycosides amikacin and plazomicin (excepting the Proteeae); the fourth-generation cephalosporin
cefepime; the β-lactamase inhibitor combination agents piperacillintazobactam, ceftolozane-tazobactam, ceftazidime-avibactam, meropenem-vaborbactam; and the novel cephalosporin-siderophore
cefiderocol. A limitation of imipenem/cilastatin-relebactam; the
tetracycline derivatives tigecycline, omadacycline, and eravacycline; and the polymyxins B and E (colistin) (which are otherwise
very active) is their poor activity against the Proteeae and Serratia.
Furthermore, the tetracycline derivatives achieve suboptimal concentrations at several anatomic sites (including urine and blood).
Clinical data are limited for cefiderocol outside of UTIs; thus, caution is in order for serious infections.
The number of antimicrobial agents effective against certain
Enterobacteriaceae is shrinking, and truly pan-resistant GNB exist.
Accordingly, the currently available antimicrobial drugs must be used
judiciously. Extensive resistance to available agents may leave the
clinician with few or no ideal therapeutic options. However, use of
a regimen that takes into account the site of infection, achievable
drug levels at that site (e.g., higher concentrations of many agents
in urine), and pharmacodynamically guided administration strategies (e.g., prolonged infusion of β-lactam agents to maintain drug
levels above the minimal inhibitory concentration [MIC]) may
increase the chance for a successful outcome. In the near future,
point-of-care identification of resistance mechanisms in GNB will
enable a strain-specific, patient-specific precision medicine–based
treatment approach that would be predicted to improve outcome.
GNB are commonly involved in polymicrobial infections, in
which the role of each individual pathogen is uncertain (Chap. 177).
Although some GNB are more pathogenic than others, it is usually
prudent, if possible, to design an antimicrobial regimen active
against all of the GNB identified, because each is typically capable
of pathogenicity in its own right. For patients treated initially with
a broad-spectrum empirical regimen, the regimen should be deescalated as expeditiously as possible once susceptibility results are
known and the patient has responded to therapy.
Treatment duration is best individualized based on underlying
host status and site of infection. However, for selected non–critically ill
patients with source control and a satisfactory clinical response to
therapy, 7 days of treatment may suffice.
ANTIMICROBIAL TREATMENT AND RESISTANCE
MECHANISMS
The most common resistance mechanisms possessed by Enterobacteriaceae are summarized in Table 161-2. However, enzymatic
hydrolysis (e.g., β-lactamases, of which >3000 variants have been
described) and modification of antimicrobials are the major
1264 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
mediators of resistance in GNB and will be discussed in detail
below. Importantly, it is becoming increasingly recognized that
MDR and XDR GNB often possess multiple plasmids and genes
that encode for multiple β-lactamases.
Broad-spectrum β-lactamases mediate resistance to many penicillins and first-generation cephalosporins and are frequently expressed
in enteric GNB. These enzymes are inhibited by β-lactamase inhibitors (e.g., clavulanate, sulbactam, tazobactam, avibactam). In their
wild-type form, they do not hydrolyze third- and fourth-generation
cephalosporins or cephamycins (e.g., cefoxitin).
Extended spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs) are modified broadspectrum enzymes that hydrolyze third-generation cephalosporins,
aztreonam, and (in some instances) fourth-generation cephalosporins, in addition to the drugs hydrolyzed by broad-spectrum
β-lactamases. GNB that express ESBLs may also exhibit porin
mutations that result in decreased uptake of relevant β-lactam
agents (cephalosporins, β-lactam/β-lactamase inhibitor combinations, and carbapenems), further reducing susceptibility to these
agents. The prevalence of acquired ESBL production, particularly of
CTX-M-type enzymes, is increasing in GNB worldwide, largely due
to the presence of the corresponding genes on transferable (conjugal) plasmids, which also variably confer or are associated with
resistance to fluoroquinolones, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole
(TMP-SMX), aminoglycosides, tetracyclines, and (more recently)
fosfomycin. To date, ESBLs are most prevalent in E. coli (especially
ST131), K. pneumoniae, and K. oxytoca, but these enzymes can
occur in all Enterobacteriaceae. The approximate regional prevalence of ESBL-producing GNB currently follows a descending
gradient as follows: China > Eastern Europe > other parts of Asia
(e.g., India) > Latin America and Africa > Western Europe, the
United States, Canada, and Australia. Travel to high-prevalence
regions increases the likelihood of colonization with these strains.
The incidence of community-acquired infections due to ESBLproducing Enterobacteriaceae has increased worldwide, including
in the United States.
Carbapenems are the most reliably active β-lactam agents against
ESBL-expressing strains. Piperacillin-tazobactam, when active in
vitro, has been used as a carbapenem-sparing alternative, but recent
TABLE 161-2 Common Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms
Possessed by the Enterobacteriaceae
MECHANISM
ANTIMICROBIALS
MOST SIGNIFICANTLY
AFFECTED
COMMON MEDIATORS OF
RESISTANCE
Efflux Tetracyclines,
fluoroquinolones (FQ)
Efflux pumps
Decreased
permeability
Fosfomycin Alterations in uptake system
Target site
alteration or
over-production
FQ, trimethoprimsulfamethoxazole (TMPSMX), and polymyxins
DNA gyrase or topoisomerase
IV for FQ; enzymes for folic acid
synthesis for TMP-SMX
Lipid A for polymyxins
Enzymatic
hydrolysis of
antimicrobials
Penicillins,
cephalosporins,
cephamycins,
carbapenems
Broad-spectrum β-lactamases
(e.g., TEM, SHV)
ESBLs (e.g., CTX-M, modified
TEM and SHV)
AmpC β-lactamases
Carbapenemases (e.g., serine
based KPC, SME, OXA; and
metallo-based NDM, VIM, IMP)
Enzymatic
modification of
antimicrobials
Aminoglycosides AAC, ANT, APH
Abbreviations: AAC, N-acetyltransferases; ANT, O-adenyltranferases; APH,
O-phosphotransferases; CTX, cefotaxime β-lactamase; ESBL, extendedspectrum β-lactamase; IMP, active on imipenem; KPC, Klebsiella pneumoniae
carbapenemase; NDM, New Delhi metallo-β-lactamase; OXA, oxacillinase; SHV,
sulfhydryl reagent variable β-lactamase; SME, Serratia marcescens enzyme; TEM,
temoniera β-lactamase; VIM, Verona integron-mediated metallo-β-lactamase.
data from the MERINO trial do not support its use for bloodstream
infections. Ceftazidime-avibactam, ceftolozane-tazobactam (less
active against Klebsiella, Enterobacter, and Citrobacter), meropenemvaborbactam, imipenem/cilastatin-relebactam, and plazomicin are
active against most ESBL-producing strains and have limited clinical data that support potential utility. The roles for tigecycline,
eravacycline, and omadacycline are unclear despite these agents’
excellent in vitro activity against most Enterobacteriaceae; however,
they are inactive against Proteus, Morganella, Providencia, and
Serratia.
Oral options for the treatment of ESBL-expressing strains are
limited. Fosfomycin, nitrofurantoin (for E. coli, 75–90% susceptible), pivmecillinam (not available in the United States), and omadacycline are the most reliably active agents. Older tetracyclines (e.g.,
doxycycline and minocycline) are also often active, although urine
levels may be insufficient and clinical experience with gram-negative
infections is limited.
AmpC β-lactamases, when induced or stably derepressed to high
levels of expression, confer resistance to the same substrates as
do ESBLs, plus to the cephamycins (e.g., cefoxitin and cefotetan).
The genes encoding these enzymes are primarily chromosomal
and therefore may not exhibit the linked resistance to TMP-SMX,
aminoglycosides, and tetracyclines that is common with ESBLs.
These enzymes are problematic for the clinician: resistance may
develop during therapy with third-generation cephalosporins and
result in clinical failure, particularly in the setting of bacteremia.
Although chromosomal AmpC β-lactamases are present in nearly
all members of the Enterobacteriaceae family (with the notable
exceptions of K. pneumoniae, K. oxytoca, and Proteus mirabilis), the
risk of clinically significant induction of high-level expression or
selection of stably derepressed mutants with cephalosporin treatment is not uniform across species, being greatest with Enterobacter
cloacae, Klebsiella (formerly Enterobacter) aerogenes, Citrobacter freundii, and Hafnia alvei, and less with Serratia marcescens, Providencia, and Morganella morganii. In addition, rare strains of E. coli, K.
pneumoniae, and other Enterobacteriaceae have acquired plasmids
that contain AmpC β-lactamase genes.
For AmpC-expressing strains, carbapenems are an appropriate
treatment option, especially for severely ill patients. Meta-analyses
support piperacillin-tazobactam as a possible option. The fourthgeneration cephalosporin cefepime may be an appropriate option if the
concomitant presence of an ESBL can be excluded (a task that currently exceeds the capability of most clinical microbiology laboratories) and source control is achieved. Vaborbactam and avibactam
are the most potent β-lactamase inhibitors. Ceftazidime-avibactam,
imipenem/cilastatin-relebactam, and cefiderocol are active in vitro,
but clinical data are limited. Other carbapenem-sparing alternatives
to consider if isolates are susceptible in vitro include fluoroquinolones, TMP-SMX, and aminoglycosides. Tigecycline, eravacycline, and
omadacycline are active in vitro (except against Proteus, Morganella,
Providencia, and Serratia).
Carbapenemases of Ambler class A (serine-based hydrolytic mechanism; K. pneumoniae carbapenemase [KPC], Serratia marcescens enzyme [SME]) and class B (metallo [zinc]-based
hydrolytic mechanism; New Delhi metallo-β-lactamase [NDM],
Verona integron-mediated metallo-β-lactamase [VIM], active on
imipenem [IMP]) confer resistance to the same drugs as do ESBLs,
plus to cephamycins and carbapenems. By contrast, Ambler class
D carbapenemases (serine-based hydrolytic mechanism, e.g., oxacillinase [OXA]) hydrolyze carbapenems and penicillins, but they
have minimal activity against extended-spectrum cephalosporins.
As with ESBLs, carbapenemase-encoding genes may be present
on transferable plasmids, which often encode linked resistance to
fluoroquinolones, TMP-SMX, tetracyclines, and aminoglycosides.
Transposon-mediated spread (e.g., TN4401 for KPC) is also important. Although all major carbapenemases have been described
around the globe, KPC is most common in the Americas, NDM in
Asia, and OXA in Europe. Asymptomatic intestinal carriage may
facilitate spread.
1265CHAPTER 161 Diseases Caused by Gram-Negative Enteric Bacilli
Carbapenemase production by Enterobacteriaceae (CPE) is most
prevalent in K. pneumoniae, followed by Enterobacter spp. and E.
coli, but has been described in nearly all members of the family.
M. morganii, Proteus, and Providencia exhibit intrinsic low-level
imipenem resistance. Although for carbapenem-resistant isolates
the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) no longer
recommends routine identification of CPE, such data conceivably
could inform epidemiologic surveillance, infection control efforts,
antimicrobial stewardship, and treatment decisions, especially if
susceptibility data for selected agents are not available. Genotypic
and phenotypic methods can detect carbapenemase genes or activity. Each of these methodologies has pros and cons. At the time of
this writing, CLSI endorses the modified carbapenem inactivation
method and the Carba NP test.
For the treatment of infections due to Enterobacteriaceae that
produce class A or D carbapenemases (serine-based hydrolysis;
KPC, OXA, SME), ceftazidime-avibactam is emerging as a firstline agent particularly for bacteremia, but suboptimal efficacy has
been observed with pneumonia and in patients on renal replacement therapy, and resistance has developed in up to 10% of cases.
Polymyxins are also active. Clinical success against KPC-producing
CRE has also been reported for meropenem-vaborbactam and, to
a lesser extent, imipenem/cilastatin-relebactam; importantly, however, neither of these agents is active against OXA-producing CRE.
For SME, based on limited in vitro data, vaborbactam is most active,
followed by avibactam, whereas relebactam is significantly less
active; this suggests that meropenem-vaborbactam or ceftazidimeavibactam should be viable treatment options for SME-producing
CRE. Ceftazidime, cefepime, and aztreonam are active against
OXA-48-like–producing CRE.
Treatment of infections due to class B metallo-β-lactamase–
producing CRE is more challenging. The polymyxins B and E currently constitute one of the last lines of defense against strains that
produce metallo-carbapenemases (e.g., NDM-1). However, these
agents’ nephrotoxicity and neurotoxicity potential, their limited
clinical efficacy, and the recent emergence of the polymyxin
resistance gene mcr-1 on a stable transferable plasmid and mcr-1–
independent resistance threaten their utility.
Aztreonam is active against metallo-carbapenemases but is
hydrolyzed by ESBLs and AmpC β-lactamases, which often coexist in XDR strains. Ongoing studies are assessing aztreonam plus
avibactam, a promising combination with in vitro activity against
class A, B, and D enzymes, for the treatment of CRE strains
that produce both NDM plus KPC or OXA. A currently available workaround involving approved drugs is co-administration of
ceftazidime-avibactam and aztreonam; avibactam protects aztreonam from hydrolysis from ESBLs and AmpC β-lactamases.
Although tigecycline, eravacycline, and omadacycline are active in
vitro, pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic limitations exist, and along
with the polymyxins, they exhibit poor activity against the Proteeae
and Serratia. Cefiderocol is active in vitro against KPC, most NDM
carbapenemases, and OXA (i.e., classes A, B, and D enzymes); clinical trials for the treatment of carbapenemase-resistant GNB are in
progress. Aminoglycosides, of which plazomicin is most active, may
have some utility for combination therapy. Fosfomycin is often active in
vitro, but clinical data in the treatment of serious infections due to CPE
are limited, resistance may develop with monotherapy, and a parenteral
formulation is not yet available in the United States and certain other
countries. Collectively, these considerations recommend fosfomycin as
a second-line agent and for use in combination therapy, except perhaps
for prostatitis due to superior penetration.
Carbapenem resistance in the absence of carbapenemases can
occur in the presence of ESBLs or AmpC β-lactamases in combination with porin mutations (non-CP-CRE); however, most laboratories will not be able to differentiate CPE from non-CP-CRE.
The non-CP-CRE phenotype is most commonly seen in E. coli and
Enterobacter spp. In general, resistance to noncarbapenem antimicrobial classes is less, but data are limited on the optimal management approach for non-CP-CRE.
β-Lactamase inhibitor resistance is an uncommon (4% of E. coli/K.
pneumoniae blood isolates) but increasingly recognized phenotype
that is characterized by resistance to β-lactamase inhibitors, but
not to third-generation cephalosporins. This mechanism of resistance is distinct from production of ESBLs, AmpC β-lactamases,
and carbapenemases, and is still being delineated. Limited evidence
suggests that ceftriaxone is an appropriate treatment option for
such strains.
Fluoroquinolone resistance is usually due to alterations in or
protection of the target sites in DNA gyrase and topoisomerase
IV, with or without decreased permeability and active efflux. Fluoroquinolone resistance is increasingly prevalent among GNB and
is associated with resistance to other antimicrobial classes; for
example, 20–80% of ESBL-producing enteric GNB are also resistant to fluoroquinolones. At present, fluoroquinolones should be
considered unreliable as empirical therapy for GNB infections in
critically ill patients.
Aminoglycoside resistance in Enterobacteriaceae is conferred via
enzymatic modification by N-acetyltransferases, O-adenyltransferases,
or O-phosphotransferases, which in turn affects ribosomal binding.
Amikacin is less affected by these transferases than gentamicin and
tobramycin and therefore is generally more active. Plazomicin is
unaffected by all of these enzymes that confer resistance to amikacin, gentamicin, and tobramycin, thereby making this an important
alternative agent in the treatment of selected XDR strains (excepting the Proteeae, against which plazomicin is poorly active). An
as yet uncommon resistance mechanism involves 16S ribosomal
RNA methylases, which prevent all aminoglycosides (including
plazomicin) from binding to their target ribosomes. To date, these
methylases are most common in strains that possess metallocarbapenemases (e.g., NDM).
■ PREVENTION
(See also Chap. 142) Certain measures are broadly applicable for
decreasing infection risk. Antimicrobial stewardship programs should
be instituted to facilitate appropriate antimicrobial use, which will
minimize the development of resistance. Diligent adherence to handhygiene protocols by health care personnel and cleaning/disinfection or
single-patient use of objects that come into contact with patients (e.g.,
stethoscopes and blood pressure cuffs) are essential. Indwelling devices
(e.g., urinary and intravascular catheters) should be used only when
necessary and inserted according to an appropriate protocol; protocols
for daily-use evaluation and prompt removal should be implemented.
Multi-use medication vials should be avoided if possible. Oral application of chlorhexidine decreases the incidence of pneumonia among
patients on ventilators. Increasing data support the implementation of
universal decolonization (e.g., chlorhexidine bathing) to prevent infection in ICU patients. The public health threat from CRE has resulted in
additional recommendations, especially for carbapenemase-producing
CRE, which are an even greater concern. These recommendations
include contact precautions for patients colonized or infected with
CRE, notification to the receiving facility from facilities transferring
such a patient, and daily environmental cleaning. Screening of contacts
and active surveillance for these bacteria may also be appropriate.
ESCHERICHIA COLI INFECTIONS
All E. coli strains share a core genome of ~2000 genes. In contrast,
an E. coli strain’s ability to cause infection and the nature of such
infections are defined largely by accessory (i.e., noncore, nonessential) genes that encode various virulence factors. The composition
of the E. coli accessory genome is continuously in flux, as demonstrated
by the recent evolution of Shiga toxin–producing enteroaggregative E. coli.
■ COMMENSAL STRAINS
Commensal E. coli variants are an important constituent of the normal
intestinal microbiota that confer benefits to the host (e.g., resistance
to colonization with pathogenic organisms). Such strains generally
lack the specialized virulence traits that enable extraintestinal and
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