Affiliation:
1. Section of Clinical Microbiology
2. Infectious Diseases, The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Clinical and microbiologic studies of 50 cases of viridans streptococcal bacteremia in cancer patients were performed. The bacteria were identified to species level by sequencing analysis of the 16S rRNA gene. At least nine
Streptococcus
spp. were found, including
S. mitis
(25 strains, 50.0% of 50); currently unnamed
Streptococcus
spp. (11 strains);
S. parasanguis
(five strains);
S. anginosus
(three strains);
S. salivarius
(two strains); and one strain each of
S. gordonii, S. sanguis, S. sobrinus
, and
S. vestibularis
. There were no
S. oralis
strains. Among 11 antibiotics of nine classes tested, no resistance to vancomycin, linezolid, or quinupristin-dalfopristin was seen. Resistance to penicillin (MIC, 4 to 12 μg/ml) was noted only among
S. mitis
strains (28.0%, 7/25) and not non-
S. mitis
strains (0/25) (
P
= 0.004). Significantly more
S. mitis
strains than non-
S. mitis
strains were resistant to fluoroquinolones and to ≥3 classes of antibiotics. Isolation of quinolone-resistant organisms was associated with the prior usage of quinolones (
P
= 0.002). Quantitative blood cultures showed that the strains resistant to levofloxacin or gatifloxacin were associated with higher colony counts than were their corresponding nonresistant strains. The young and elderly patients also had higher levels of bacteremia caused predominantly by
S. mitis
. Septic shock was present in 17 (34.0% of 50) patients, and 13 of those cases were caused by
S. mitis
(
P
= 0.007). These results suggest that
S. mitis
is the most common cause of viridans streptococcal bacteremia in cancer patients and is more resistant to antibiotics than other species.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
110 articles.
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