Acute Pyelonephritis with Bacteremia in an 89-Year-Old Woman Caused by Two Slow-Growing Bacteria: Aerococcus urinae and Actinotignum schaalii

Author:

Lotte Laurène1,Durand Claire2,Chevalier Alicia345,Gaudart Alice3,Cheddadi Yousra3,Ruimy Raymond345,Lotte Romain345ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Cannes General Hospital, 06400 Cannes, France

2. Department of Infectious Diseases, Nice University Hospital, 06003 Nice, France

3. Department of Bacteriology, Nice University Hospital, 06003 Nice, France

4. CHU de Nice, Université Côte d’Azur, 06000 Nice, France

5. Inserm, C3M, Université Côte d’Azur, 06204 Nice, France

Abstract

Aerococcus urinae is an aerobic Gram-positive coccus that grows as tiny alpha-hemolytic colonies. Actinotignum schaalii is a slow-growing facultative anaerobic Gram-positive rod. These bacteria are part of the urogenital microbiota of healthy patients, but can also be involved in urinary tract infections (UTIs), particularly in elderly men and young children. Because A. urinae and A. schaalii are fastidious and are difficult to identify with phenotypic methods, they are underestimated causes of UTIs. Their growth is slow and requires a blood-enriched medium incubated under an anaerobic or 5% CO2 atmosphere for 48 h and from 24 to 48 h for A. schaalii and A. urinae, respectively. Furthermore, accurate identification is only possible using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) or molecular-based methods. In rare cases, these bacteria can be responsible for invasive infections. We describe, here, an unusual case of bacteremic UTI caused by both A. schaalii and A. urinae in an 89-year-old woman. She presented with dyspnea, and bacteriuria was noted. This challenging clinical and microbiological diagnosis was made in our laboratory by Gram staining urine with a leucocyte count >50/μL and/or a bacterial count >14/μL urinary culture on a blood agar plate. After 10 days of antimicrobial treatment consisting of 2 g amoxicillin PO t.i.d., the patient was discharged with a complete clinical and biological recovery. A. schaalii and A. urinae are probably still underestimated causes of UTIs. Microbiologists could consider the presence of these two bacteria using appropriate culture and identification methods in cases where a positive direct examination of urine reveals small Gram-positive rods or cocci, where undocumented UTIs are present in elderly patients, but also where a urinary dipstick is negative for nitrites and is associated with leukocyturia.

Funder

Ministère de la Santé et de la Prévention of France

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Microbiology (medical),Microbiology

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