Volume 24, Number 2—February 2018
CME ACTIVITY - Synopsis
Hypervirulent Klebsiella pneumoniae in Cryptogenic Liver Abscesses, Paris, France
Introduction
In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by Medscape, LLC and Emerging Infectious Diseases. Medscape, LLC is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.
Medscape, LLC designates this Journal-based CME activity for a maximum of 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
All other clinicians completing this activity will be issued a certificate of participation. To participate in this journal CME activity: (1) review the learning objectives and author disclosures; (2) study the education content; (3) take the post-test with a 75% minimum passing score and complete the evaluation at http://www.medscape.org/journal/eid; and (4) view/print certificate.
Release date: January 17, 2018; Expiration date: January 17, 2019
Learning Objectives
Upon completion of this activity, participants will be able to:
• Assess the pathogenesis of pyogenic liver abscesses (PLAs)
• Evaluate clinical features of PLAs associated with Klebsiella pneumoniae
• Analyze microbiologic features of PLAs associated with K. pneumoniae
CME Editor
Thomas J. Gryczan, MS, Technical Writer/Editor, Emerging Infectious Diseases. Disclosure: Thomas J. Gryczan, MS, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
CME Author
Charles P. Vega, MD, Health Sciences Clinical Professor, UC Irvine Department of Family Medicine; Associate Dean for Diversity and Inclusion, UC Irvine School of Medicine, Irvine, California, USA. Disclosure: Charles P. Vega, MD, has disclosed the following financial relationships: served as an advisor or consultant for McNeil Consumer Healthcare; served as a speaker or a member of a speakers bureau for Shire Pharmaceuticals.
Authors
Disclosures: Benjamin Rossi, MD; Maria Ludovica Gasperini, MD; Véronique Leflon-Guibout, MD; Alice Gioanni, MD; Victoire de Lastours, MD, PhD; Geoffrey Rossi, MD; Safi Dokmak, MD; Maxime Ronot, MD, PhD; Olivier Roux, MD; Marie-Hélène Nicolas-Chanoine, MD, PhD; Bruno Fantin, MD, PhD; and Agnès Lefort, MD, PhD, have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
Abstract
Liver abscesses containing hypervirulent Klebsiella pneumoniae have emerged during the past 2 decades, originally in Southeast Asia and then worldwide. We hypothesized that hypervirulent K. pneumoniae might also be emerging in France. In a retrospective, monocentric, cohort study, we analyzed characteristics and outcomes for 199 consecutive patients in Paris, France, with liver abscesses during 2010−2015. We focused on 31 patients with abscesses containing K. pneumoniae. This bacterium was present in most (14/27, 52%) cryptogenic liver abscesses. Cryptogenic K. pneumoniae abscesses were more frequently community-acquired (p<0.00001) and monomicrobial (p = 0.008), less likely to involve cancer patients (p<0.01), and relapsed less often (p<0.01) than did noncryptogenic K. pneumoniae liver abscesses. K. pneumoniae isolates from cryptogenic abscesses belonged to either the K1 or K2 serotypes and had more virulence factors than noncryptogenic K. pneumoniae isolates. Hypervirulent K. pneumoniae are emerging as the main pathogen isolated from cryptogenic liver abscesses in the study area.
Pyogenic liver abscesses are common intra-abdominal infections (1–4), associated with a substantial severity (5). Most (30%–70%) pyogenic liver abscesses result from a biliary origin (6), followed by a portal origin (10%−20%) complicating intra-abdominal diseases, such as appendicitis, diverticulitis, infected gastrointestinal tumors, or chronic inflammatory bowel disease. Less frequently, pyogenic liver abscesses might also occur after abdominal surgery, typically pancreato-duodenectomy associated with injury of the main hepatic artery or some aberrant hepatic arteries, split liver transplantation, or chemoembolization or ablation of liver tumors, or might result from the surinfection of preexisting hepatic lesions, such as hepatic cysts, tumors (primary or secondary), or hydatid cysts (<2%) (7,8). When none of these mechanisms are found, pyogenic liver abscesses are considered cryptogenic (no obvious cause); such abscesses account for ≈20% of cases in industrialized countries (9–12).
In most instances, pyogenic liver abscesses are polymicrobial, and Escherichia coli is typically the most common pathogen involved (13). Since the 1990s, pyogenic liver abscesses caused by specific hypervirulent strains of Klebsiella pneumoniae have emerged as a major epidemiologic problem in Southeast Asia and now represent >80% of pyogenic liver abscesses in Asia (11,14,15). In the past decade, cases of hypervirulent K. pneumoniae pyogenic liver abscesses have been reported worldwide, including in Europe and North America, in patients with no travel history to Asia (16–25).
Typically, hypervirulent K. pneumoniae are responsible for severe monomicrobial cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses (11) often associated with unusual septic metastatic localizations, such as endophthalmitis or meningitis, in immunocompetent hosts. Colonies of hypervirulent K. pneumoniae grown on agar plates have a hypermucoviscous phenotype, as shown by a positive result for a string test (11). These strains express genes encoding for virulence factors, such as the hypermucoviscous phenotype (prmpA), iron acquisition systems (iutA, kfu, ybts), and the capsular serotypes K1 or K2 (magA and wzi) (26,27).
After recent observations of hypervirulent K. pneumoniae pyogenic liver abscesses at Hôpital Beaujon (Clichy, France) and other medical centers in France (22), we hypothesized that hypervirulent K. pneumoniae cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses might also represent an emerging disease in France. Thus, we retrospectively analyzed the characteristics of K. pneumoniae pyogenic liver abscesses in a monocentric cohort of pyogenic liver abscesses during 2010−2015 and compared the characteristics of cryptogenic and noncryptogenic K. pneumoniae abscesses.
Study Population
We conducted a retrospective, monocentric, cohort study at Hôpital Beaujon, a 500-bed tertiary care university hospital on the outskirts of Paris. This hospital specializes in digestive and liver diseases and is 1 of 5 major regional centers specializing in liver diseases; the hospital serves a population of 12 million persons (≈15% of the population of France). We reviewed all records from 2010–2015 in which a primary diagnosis was liver abscess. After records were made anonymous, we reviewed medical charts to confirm a diagnosis of liver abscess, which was defined by the association of typical clinical features (fever, abdominal pain); biologic abnormalities (inflammatory syndrome, increased bilirubin level); and lesions corresponding to an abscess observed by imaging (computed tomography scan, ultrasonography, or magnetic resonance imaging). Only patients with a microbiologically proven pyogenic abscess were included.
All medical records were reviewed by the same group of physicians, including clinicians (B.R., M.L.G., and A.L.) and a radiologist (M.R.), and cases were divided into 4 groups according to the suspected origin of the infection: biliary, portal, postprocedural, or superinfection of underlying liver diseases. In the absence of any of these conditions, pyogenic liver abscesses were considered cryptogenic. We then obtained K. pneumoniae pyogenic liver abscesses from each group and analyzed their epidemiologic, clinical, radiologic, and microbiological characteristics and their outcomes.
Identification and Characterization of K. pneumoniae Isolates
For all patients included in this study, microbiological identification was available by blood cultures or cultures of abscess drainage. At the time of disease, all strains had been identified by using the API System (bioMérieux, Marcy l’Étoile, France) or matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization/time-of-flight mass spectrometry (Bruker, Wissembourg, France), and antibiograms had been created. For this study, all available K. pneumoniae isolates underwent other phenotypic and molecular tests.
We assessed hypermucoviscosity by using the string test. A positive result for this test was defined as formation of a viscous string >5 mm when bacterial colonies are stretched on an agar plate (28). We determined capsular serotypes K1 or K2 and 8 virulence genes (a plasmid-borne regulator of the extracellular polysaccharide synthesis gene [prmpA], 4 iron-capture systems genes [aerobactin iutA, yersiniabactin ybtS kfu, and entrobactin entD], a capsular fucose production gene [wcaG] [29], an allantoin metabolism gene [allS], and a type-3 fimbrial adhesion gene [mrkD]) by using a multiplex PCR, as described (30). We performed multilocus sequence typing by using the international K. pneumoniae multilocus sequence typing scheme (http://bigsdb.web.pasteur.fr/).
Statistical Analysis
We compared characteristics of K. pneumoniae cryptogenic and noncryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses by using Student t-test or Wilcoxon rank-sum test for continuous variables and χ2 or Fisher exact tests for categorical variables, when appropriate. A p value <0.05 was considered significant. We performed statistical analyses by using Stata version 13 (StataCorp LLC, College Station, TX, USA).
A total of 216 patients had pyogenic liver abscesses during the study period. However, after analyzing all medical charts, we found that 199 pyogenic liver abscesses were definitively identified; these abscesses were further studied. Among the 199 abscesses, a microbiological diagnosis was available for 158 abscesses, which constitute the study cohort (Figure 1). Pyogenic liver abscesses were cryptogenic in 27 (17%) of 158 patients. K. pneumoniae was isolated from 31 (20%) of 158 patients and was more frequent in patients with cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses (14/27, 52%) than in those with noncryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses (17/131, 13%; p = 0.00003). K. pneumoniae was the most common causative microorganism in the group with cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses (Figure 2).
We analyzed characteristics of patients having K. pneumoniae cryptogenic and noncryptogenic liver abscesses (Table 1). A total of 13/17 patients with K. pneumoniae noncryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses had a biliary tract origin, and 2/17 showed development of pyogenic liver abscesses after liver transplantation (1 patient after cyst punction and 1 patient after chemoembolization). Healthcare-related infections (12/17 vs. 0/14; p<0.00001) and cancer (7/17 vs. 0/14; p<0.01) were significantly more frequent for patients with noncryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses than for patients with cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses. We found a tendency toward higher C-reactive protein levels for patients with K. pneumoniae cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses. We observed 7 relapses (41%) for the 17 patients with K. pneumoniae noncryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses, compared with none for the 14 patients with cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses (p<0.01) (Table 1).
In the cryptogenic group, 3 patients were of Asian origin, compared with 1 in the noncryptogenic group. Three patients had severe septic metastases. The first of these patients was a 64-year-old woman with diabetes from Sri Lanka who had K1-type K. pneumoniae pyogenic liver abscesses, endophthalmitis, and brain abscesses. She survived after enucleation treatment. The second patient was a 57-year-old man with diabetes from Morocco who had K2-type K. pneumoniae pyomyositis associated with pyogenic liver abscesses. He was cured after 6 weeks of treatment with antimicrobial drugs. The third patient was a 33-year-old man from France who did not have any previous medical condition, but in whom K1-type K. pneumoniae acute tibial periostitis associated with pyogenic liver abscesses developed. He was cured after 6 weeks of treatment with antimicrobial drugs.
Microbiological Analysis
All 14 cryptogenic K. pneumoniae pyogenic liver abscesses but only 6/17 noncryptogenic cases were monomicrobial (p = 0.008). Among the 31 K. pneumoniae pyogenic liver abscesses, data for antimicrobial drug susceptibility were available for 13/14 cryptogenic isolates and 14/17 noncryptogenic isolates. A total of 23 (74%) of 31 isolates had been stored at −80°C and were further characterized: 13 (93%) of 14 from cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses and 10 (59%) of 17 from noncryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses. We determined characteristics of these strains (Table 2).
All 13 K. pneumoniae isolates from cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses were confirmed to be hypervirulent K. pneumoniae; 10 had a positive string test result and a K1 (n = 10) or K2 (n = 3) capsular serotype. However, only 3/10 isolates from noncryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses had a positive string test result (p<0.0005), and only 1 had a K2 serotype (p<0.00005). This K2 isolate had 3 virulence genes (prmpa, iutA, and ybts); 2 pyogenic liver abscesses in the drainage area of an obstructed bile duct caused by pancreatic cancer developed in the patient infected with this strain.
We found the prmpA gene in all isolates from cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses but only in 1 isolate from noncryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses (p<0.00005). Other virulence genes, such as iutA, ybtS, kfu, wcaG, and allS, were more common in isolates from cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses, and entD and mrkD were similarly present in both groups (Table 2). All K1 K. pneumoniae had sequence type (ST) 23. We further noted new alleles of the gapA and rpoB genes, which resulted in a new ST (ST2395) (Table 2).
K. pneumoniae isolates from cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses were less likely to be antimicrobial drug resistant than were K. pneumoniae isolates from noncryptgenic pyogenic liver abscesses. A total of 54% of the isolates were wild type, and no extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL) was detected in the 13 strains from cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses compared with 36% wild-type strains and 21% ESBL-producing strains in the noncryptogenic group.
We studied 199 patients with liver abscesses managed in a single hospital during 2010−2015 and analyzed in detail 158 patients with microbiologically proven pyogenic liver abscesses. Although our study was retrospective, it had the advantage of particularly homogeneous management in a monocentric university hospital specializing in gastroenterology, liver diseases, and abdominal surgery. The main finding was that hypervirulent K. pneumoniae are now responsible for most cryptogenic liver abscesses in patients in the Paris region in France.
Pyogenic liver abscesses caused by hypervirulent K. pneumoniae represented 14 (8.9%) of 158 liver abscesses, which is more frequent than previously described in Europe (16). Although hypervirulent K. pneumoniae have only rarely been described in Europe and North America (18,21,22,28,31), our results indicate that hypervirulent K. pneumoniae pyogenic liver abscesses might be considered as an emerging infection in the Paris area and should always be considered in the diagnosis of patients with pyogenic liver abscesses of no obvious origin. This factor is a key point because infections are often severe, metastatic locations might impair prognosis (especially for meningeal or ocular involvement), and immediate treatment with antimicrobial drugs is required.
We found a relatively low proportion (17%) of cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses, which might be related to the conditions of our hospital, which is a highly specialized tertiary care hospital. However, similar rates of cryptogenic abscesses were reported in the United Kingdom (7/42, 16.7%) (32). This finding suggests that epidemic diffusion of hypervirulent K. pneumoniae in Europe has not yet reached its peak, in contrast to what was observed in other regions, because cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses now represent as many as 34% of pyogenic liver abscess cases in Australia (33) and 65% of pyogenic liver abscess cases in Asia (34).
All K. pneumoniae isolates from these cryptogenic abscesses were hypermucoviscous (defined as a positive string test result) and belonged to K1 or K2 serotypes, thus having the characteristics of hypervirulent K. pneumoniae. Similar to Ye et al. (35), we observed a clonal diffusion of ST23 K1-type hypervirulent K. pneumoniae, in contrast to K2-type hypervirulent K. pneumoniae, which belong to different sequence types (ST65, ST86, ST380, and ST679) (35).
One patient with noncryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses was also infected with a strain harboring phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of hypervirulent K. pneumoniae. This finding indicated that hypervirulent K. pneumoniae might also be involved in noncryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses.
From a clinical point of view, our description of hypervirulent K. pneumoniae−related pyogenic liver abscesses is consistent with previous reports. These abscesses were mostly monomicrobial, rarely harbored organisms that showed antimicrobial drug resistance, occurred in persons with few concurrent conditions, were not healthcare-related, and were more likely responsible for aggressive inflammatory disease with metastatic infectious locations (17,36,37). Unlike a previous report (17), diabetes did not appear to be a risk factor for hypervirulent K. pneumoniae pyogenic liver abscesses, and Asian patients did not represent the main ethnic group (only 21% in our study vs. 50% in cohorts in the United States). In addition, hypervirulent K. pneumoniae−related pyogenic liver abscesses were usually single and located in the right hepatic lobe (17).
Although hypervirulent strains were involved and metastatic locations were frequent, outcomes were more favorable than for patients with noncryptogenic K. pneumoniae pyogenic liver abscesses, probably because patients with hypervirulent K. pneumoniae−related pyogenic liver abscesses were less likely to be immunosuppressed or have cancer. Thus, host factors seem to outweigh bacterial determinants in the prognosis of pyogenic liver abscesses (38). However, a substantial mortality rate (4%–10%) caused by these hypervirulent strains occurred and should not be underestimated (17,36–38). As found in our study, antimicrobial drug resistance was rarely an issue for these hypervirulent strains. Nevertheless, ESBL- and carbapenem-resistant hypervirulent K. pneumoniae have been reported in Taiwan, China, India, and France and might represent an emerging problem in the future (39–42).
The microbiological definition of hypervirulent K. pneumoniae is still ambiguous because none of the phenotypic (string test) or genotypic (capsular serotype and virulence genes) tests alone is specific for hypervirulence (43–46). However, the combination of clinically aggressive monomicrobial cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses and isolation of positive string test−positive K. pneumoniae isolates with K1/K2 capsular serotypes and these genes involved in hypervirulence (e.g., prmpA and iutA) is highly suggestive of hypervirulent K. pneumoniae−related disease. We believe that it is the combination of this typical clinical and microbiological presentation that defines what might be called the hypervirulent K. pneumoniae syndrome.
Our study had several limitations. First, this study was monocentric and retrospective, which might limit its epidemiologic scope. Second, information concerning patients’ travel history was missing. Third, because our center is highly specialized in liver diseases, cryptogenic hypervirulent K. pneumoniae pyogenic liver abscesses might be underestimated, and cancer or postsurgical pyogenic liver abscesses are probably overrepresented.
As the main microorganism responsible for cryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses, hypervirulent K. pneumoniae represents an emerging microorganism in the Paris area. The clinical and molecular differences between K. pneumoniae implicated in cryptogenic and noncryptogenic pyogenic liver abscesses confirm the correlation between clinical and microbiological virulence and define a hypervirulent K. pneumoniae syndrome. This finding is a major epidemiologic shift that should be considered in the diagnostic and therapeutic management of patients with pyogenic liver abscesses without underlying or obvious causes. Given the rapid increase in the prevalence of hypervirulent K. pneumoniae pyogenic liver abscesses in other parts of the world, it is possible that France and Europe might experience the same epidemic evolution as occurred in Asia in the early 2000s. Thus, clinicians need to be prepared for this possibility.
Dr. Benjamin Rossi is a senior fellow at Hôpital Beaujon, Clichy, France. His research interests are bacterial drug resistance and virulence.
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Article Title:
Hypervirulent Klebsiella pneumoniae in Cryptogenic Liver Abscesses, Paris, France
CME Questions
1. You are called to evaluate a 63-year-old man with a 5-day history of right abdominal pain and fever. Results on ultrasound examination of his abdomen suggest a liver abscess. What should you consider regarding the pathogenesis of pyogenic liver abscesses (PLAs)?
A. Most cases of PLAs are related to recent abdominal surgery
B. Most cases of PLAs originate in the biliary tract
C. Most cases of PLAs are cryptogenic in origin
D. Klebsiella pneumoniae is the organism most commonly involved in PLAs
2. The patient undergoes drainage of his abscess, and a culture of the abscess grows K. pneumoniae. According to the results of the current study, what might you expect regarding clinical features of his infection?
A. The majority of patients with positive culture results for K. pneumoniae had a history of liver transplantation
B. K. pneumoniae was more common in cryptogenic vs. noncryptogenic infections
C. Most patients with cryptogenic PLAs associated with K. pneumoniae infection experienced severe septic metastases
D. Relapses were common among patients with cryptogenic PLAs associated with K. pneumoniae infection
3. What should you consider regarding microbiologic outcomes in the current study as you consider treatment options for this patient?
A. Cryptogenic cases featuring K. pneumoniae were more likely than noncryptogenic cases to be polymicrobial
B. K. pneumoniae isolates from cryptogenic cases of PLAs were much more likely to demonstrate antimicrobial resistance vs noncryptogenic cases
C. Hypervirulent K. pneumoniae was found in only a small percentage of cases of cryptogenic PLAs
D. All K. pneumoniae isolates from cryptogenic PLAs featured the prmpA gene
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Table of Contents – Volume 24, Number 2—February 2018
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Please use the form below to submit correspondence to the authors or contact them at the following address:
Agnès Lefort, Service de Médecine Interne, Hôpital Beaujon, 100 Blvd du Général Leclerc, 92110, Clichy, France
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