Southern African Journal of Infectious Diseases (Feb 2024)

Non-toxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae endocarditis: A cluster of five cases

  • Tamsin Lovelock,
  • Mignon du Plessis,
  • Clinton van der Westhuizen,
  • Jacques T. Janson,
  • Charlene Lawrence,
  • Arifa Parker,
  • Alfonso Pecoraro,
  • Hans Prozesky,
  • Anne von Gottberg,
  • Jantjie Taljaard

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4102/sajid.v39i1.539
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 39, no. 1
pp. e1 – e7

Abstract

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Background: Classical toxin-mediated respiratory diphtheria has become less common because of widespread effective vaccination globally but invasive disease as a result of non-toxigenic strains of Corynebacterium diphtheriae is not prevented by vaccination and may result in severe disease, including infective endocarditis (IE). Objectives: To describe the outbreak and subsequent investigation of a cluster of five cases of non-toxigenic C. diphtheriae endocarditis. Method: A retrospective observational case series of five cases of non-toxigenic C. diphtheriae endocarditis identified in the rural West Coast district of the Western Cape province of South Africa between May 2021 and June 2021. Results: Non-toxigenic C. diphtheriae IE had an aggressive clinical course with high mortality in this cohort. Only one of five patients survived to hospital discharge. The surviving patient received a prompt diagnosis with early surgical intervention but still had a complicated clinical course. Notably, only one case had a pre-existing risk factor for IE, namely a prosthetic valve. Whole genome sequencing of clinical isolates confirmed that all isolates were of the same novel sequence type of non-toxigenic C. diphtheriae but despite a thorough investigation no epidemiological link was ever found between the cases. Conclusion: Non-toxigenic strains of C. diphtheriae are less well known but may be highly virulent and cause severe invasive disease. Contribution: This is the largest cluster of non-toxigenic C. diphtheriae IE ever described in South Africa and expands the body of literature on this unusual but possibly emerging infection.

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