Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jan 2016)

Waterborne Elizabethkingia meningoseptica in Adult Critical Care

  • Luke S.P. Moore,
  • Daniel S. Owens,
  • Annette Jepson,
  • Jane F. Turton,
  • Simon Ashworth,
  • Hugo Donaldson,
  • Alison H. Holmes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2201.150139
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 9 – 17

Abstract

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Elizabethkingia meningoseptica is an infrequent colonizer of the respiratory tract; its pathogenicity is uncertain. In the context of a 22-month outbreak of E. meningoseptica acquisition affecting 30 patients in a London, UK, critical care unit (3% attack rate) we derived a measure of attributable morbidity and determined whether E. meningoseptica is an emerging nosocomial pathogen. We found monomicrobial E. meningoseptica acquisition (n = 13) to have an attributable morbidity rate of 54% (systemic inflammatory response syndrome >2, rising C-reactive protein, new radiographic changes), suggesting that E. meningoseptica is a pathogen. Epidemiologic and molecular evidence showed acquisition was water-source–associated in critical care but identified numerous other E. meningoseptica strains, indicating more widespread distribution than previously considered. Analysis of changes in gram-negative speciation rates across a wider London hospital network suggests this outbreak, and possibly other recently reported outbreaks, might reflect improved diagnostics and that E. meningoseptica thus is a pseudo-emerging pathogen.

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