Short communication: first case of bacteraemia caused by Dielma fastidiosa in a patient hospitalized with diverticulitis

Author:

Forman‐Ankjær Barbara1,Hvid‐Jensen Frederik2,Kobel Carl Mathias3ORCID,Greve Thomas1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Microbiology Aarhus University Hospital Aarhus Denmark

2. Department of Surgery Aarhus University Hospital Aarhus Denmark

3. Microbial Ecology and Meta‐Omics group Norwegian University of Life Sciences Ås Norway

Abstract

Dielma fastidiosa is a gram‐negative, anaerobic rod belonging to the family Erysipelotrichaceae. D. fastidiosa has previously been isolated in human stool samples as part of the commensal flora; however, prior to this case, it has never been identified as a human pathogen. We present the first case of bacteraemia with D. fastidiosa. Bacterial growth in the blood culture bottle was detected by the automated blood culture system BacT/ALERT 3D. Culturing was performed, and bacterial colonies were identified as D. fastidiosa using MALDI‐TOF MS. A subsequent whole‐genome sequencing using Illumina NovaSeq was performed, and a phylogenetic tree depicting all available sequences of D. fastidiosa was generated. The reference MALDI‐TOF spectrum and species identification was compared with the previously published spectrum. Whole‐genome sequencing confirmed the tentative MALDI‐TOF species identification. Notably, the maximum‐likelihood‐based phylogenetic analysis placed the D. fastidiosa isolate from this clinical case within the known variation of the eight publicly available sequences of this species. We identified D. fastidiosa by whole‐genome sequencing followed by maximum‐likelihood analysis as a possible pathogen in this case of bacteraemia in a patient hospitalized with diverticulitis.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Microbiology (medical),General Medicine,Immunology and Allergy,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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