AI Article Synopsis

  • Legionella sainthelensi is a rare bacterium linked to severe cases of Legionnaires' disease, first isolated in 1980 from water near Mt. St-Helens, but there is limited data on it.
  • A documented case involved a 35-year-old woman with Sharp's syndrome, who developed severe pneumonia caused by L. sainthelensi after being treated with hydroxychloroquine and corticosteroids; she eventually improved with macrolide treatment in the ICU.
  • Currently, only 14 cases of L. sainthelensi infections have been reported globally, highlighting the challenge of diagnosing this pathogen, as common tests often miss it, leading to underdiagnosis in patients presenting with pneumonia symptoms.

Article Abstract

Background: Legionella spp. are ubiquitous freshwater bacteria responsible for rare but potentially severe cases of Legionnaires' disease (LD). Legionella sainthelensi is a non-pneumophila Legionella species that was first isolated in 1980 from water near Mt. St-Helens (USA). Although rare cases of LD caused by L. sainthelensi have been reported, very little data is available on this pathogen.

Case Presentation: We describe the first documented case of severe bilateral pleuropneumonia caused by L. sainthelensi. The patient was a 35-year-old woman with Sharp's syndrome treated with long-term hydroxychloroquine and corticosteroids who was hospitalized for an infectious illness in a university hospital in Reunion Island (France). The patient's clinical presentation was complicated at first (bilateral pneumonia, multiloculated pleural effusion, then bronchopleural fistula) but her clinical condition eventually improved with the reintroduction of macrolides (spiramycin) in intensive care unit. Etiological diagnosis was confirmed by PCR syndromic assay and culture on bronchoalveolar lavage.

Conclusions: To date, only 14 documented cases of L. sainthelensi infection have been described worldwide. This pathogen is difficult to identify because it is not or poorly detected by urinary antigen and molecular methods (like PCR syndromic assays that primarily target L. pneumophila and that have only recently been deployed in microbiology laboratories). Pneumonia caused by L. sainthelensi is likely underdiagnosed as a result. Clinicians should consider the possibility of non-pneumophila Legionella infection in patients with a compatible clinical presentation when microbiological diagnostic tools targeted L. pneumophila tested negative.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8447505PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12879-021-06651-1DOI Listing

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