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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, April 1998, p. 1160-1163, Vol. 36, No. 4
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Nosocomial Pneumonia Caused by Three Genetically Different
Strains of Legionella pneumophila and Detection of These
Strains in the Hospital Water Supply
P. Christian
Lück,1,*
Hans-Martin
Wenchel,2 and
Jürgen H.
Helbig1
Institut für Medizinische Mikrobiologie
und Hygiene, Universitätsklinikum, Technische Universität
Dresden, D-01307 Dresden,1 and
Institut für Medizinische Mikrobiologie und Hygiene,
Universität zu Köln, D-50935
Köln,2 Germany
Received 2 July 1997/Returned for modification 9 September
1997/Accepted 5 January 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
A 44-year-old woman developed Legionella pneumophila
pneumonia after cerebral surgery. Initially, one colony from a
clinical specimen and two colonies from water samples, all belonging to serogroup 12, did not match when their DNA restriction patterns were
compared. When additional colonies from the water specimens were
analyzed, a serogroup 12 strain complementary to that found in the
clinical specimen was identified. Other colonies from the clinical
specimen were identified as serogroup 12 strains complementary to those
identified from the water. In addition, the same serogroup 1 strain was
isolated from the patient and the water system.
 |
TEXT |
Legionella pneumophila is
recognized as an important pathogen causing nosocomial pneumonia.
Patients with an impaired immune system or after surgery have a high
risk of acquiring legionellosis (12, 19). Although different
species, serogroups, and monoclonal subtypes of Legionella
have been isolated from single environmental sources, infections by
multiple strains have rarely been reported (1, 4, 5, 10,
16). One possible explanation for this is that only a single
colony or a few colonies are subtyped from clinical samples.
Nevertheless, the majority of clinical cases are likely to be caused by
single strains. We report here on the usefulness of molecular subtyping
techniques (2) for detecting Legionella strains
harbored in a hospital water supply system and involved in a case of
infection with multiple strains of L. pneumophila.
Case report.
A 44-year-old female patient with a history of
breast carcinoma presented with tinnitus, dizziness, and nausea.
Magnetic resonance tomography revealed a metastasis of the breast
carcinoma in the left cerebellopontine angle, which was removed through
a left suboccipital craniectomy. On the first postoperative day (POD), the patient could be extubated and showed unchanged neurological findings, except that a paralysis affecting swallowing had developed. Twelve hours later, the patient developed an obstructive
hydrocephalus caused by local swelling at the operative site.
Despite ventricular drainage and antiedematous therapy,
the patient lost consciousness on the second POD and had to be
reintubated and ventilated. On the seventh POD, the body temperature
increased to 39.5°C and a chest X ray disclosed bilateral
pulmonary infiltrates. Blood cultures, tracheal secretions, and urine
and cerobrospinal fluid specimens were sterile by conventional
bacteriological techniques. Treatment with ciprofloxacin and
clindamycin was started but did not improve the patient's
condition. On the 13th POD, serology for L. pneumophila
became positive. Despite changing the therapy to rifampin,
erythromycin, and ciprofloxacin in standard dosage, the patient died
from multiorgan failure on the 15th POD, before the culture for
Legionella became positive.
Microbiological methods for Legionella.
Cultures of
tracheal secretions were performed with selective buffered
charcoal-yeast extract agar (BMPA-BCYE; Oxoid, Wesel, Germany)
made in-house. Subsequent to the growth of Legionella from the clinical specimen, water samples were collected from taps and
outlets in the patient's room and from other locations in the ward.
Showers are not in use in the intensive care unit. Additional
water samples were cultured 3 months later, because the number of
colonies kept was not sufficient for further typing. The hospital water
system is approximately 40 years old and supplies four separate
buildings. One-liter samples were collected after the water reached
constant temperatures, which ranged from 35 to 45°C. The water
samples were plated and unconcentrated, and after filtration of
MWY-BCYE agar plates (Oxoid) revealed Legionella counts of between 10 and 20 CFU/ml. No attempt was made to culture specimens from the cold water system, and attempts to recover legionella-infected fluids from respiratory equipment were
unsuccessful.
Serological typing of Legionella strains was performed with
a genus-specific monoclonal antibody (MAb), 22-1 (9); a
commercially available fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled,
L. pneumophila-specific MAb (Fresenius, Oberursel,
Germany); and rabbit antisera for all 15 serogroups of L. pneumophila (14). MAbs to react with serogroup 12 strains were prepared in our laboratory and used as described previously (8, 13). Serogroup 1 strains were subtyped with MAbs according to the method described by Joly et al. (11). Epidemiologically unrelated L. pneumophila strains were
taken from our strain collection. For macrorestriction analysis (MRA), chromosomal DNAs were digested overnight with SfiI,
AscI, and NotI (New England Biolabs, Schwahlbach,
Germany) and separated with the CHEF III System (BioRad Laboratories,
Munich, Germany) (14). Computer-assisted analysis of the
restriction patterns was performed with the software package GelCompare
(Applied Maths, Kortrijk, Belgium).
We initially investigated one colony from the clinical specimen and two
colonies from the water samples. They belonged to serogroup 12 and were
indistinguishable by using MAbs (Table
1). When macrorestriction patterns were
compared, the clinical isolate was unrelated to the two strains from
water (Fig. 1). There were three possible
reasons for this discrepancy. First, the patient could have acquired
the infection in the rehabilitation center in which she stayed prior to
the operation. However, since the incubation period for legionellosis
ranges from 2 to 10 (16) days and the patient was in the
hospital for 9 days before developing the infection, a nosocomial
origin of the pneumonia was strongly suspected. Second, we could have
overlooked the causative strain in the environmental samples if more
than one strain was present. Third, the patient may have suffered
from simultaneous infection with several different strains.

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FIG. 1.
MRA of SfiI-cleaved DNAs of L. pneumophila strains isolated from the patient and from the
hospital water supply. DNA sizes are indicated on the left. Lanes: Y,
yeast chromosomal DNA standard; L, lambda concatemers; 1, Köln P2
(sg12); 2, Köln U1 (sg12); 3, Köln U2 (sg12); 4, Köln
P4 (sg12); 5, Köln P1 (sg12); 6, Köln U6 (sg12); 7, Köln U8 (sg12); 8, Köln P3 (sg1); 9, Köln P6 (sg1);
10, Köln U4 (sg1); 11, Köln U7 (sg1); 12, Köln U3
(sg12); and 13, Köln U5 (sg12).
|
|
Therefore, we analyzed additional colonies. Of the eight colonies
grown from the clinical sample, four belonged to serogroup
1, monoclonal subtype Bellingham, and four belonged to serogroup
12. Of
the 47 environmental colonies serotyped, 5 were non-
L. pneumophila species, since they reacted with a genus-specific
MAb
but not with the FITC-labeled,
L. pneumophila-specific
MAb.
Of 42 environmental
L. pneumophila strains, 19 belonged to serogroup
1, subtype Camperdown; 3 belonged to serogroup 1, subtype Bellingham;
6 belonged to serogroup 6; and 14 belonged to
serogroup 12. All
serogroup 12 strains were indistinguishable by MAb
typing.
Altogether, 8 colonies from the clinical specimen and 12 colonies from
the water samples were analyzed by MRA. Selected
SfiI
restriction patterns of these strains are given in Fig.
1. MRA
with
NotI and
AscI confirmed the identities of the
serogroup 12
strains (Table
1) and of the serogroup 1 strain
(monoclonal subtype
Bellingham) isolated here from the clinical
specimen and from
the hospital water system. The serogroup 12 strains
belonged to
two different genotypes, each of which showed quite
different
restriction patterns. According to the definition of Tenover
et
al. (
18), these strains were unrelated. By
computer-assisted
analysis, the similarity coefficient of Jaccard
revealed a large
genetic distance between the
SfiI patterns
for these two strains
(Fig.
2). Thus, we
are sure that one strain was not derived from
the other.

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FIG. 2.
Dendrogram generated from the Jaccard similarity
coefficient computed for 14 serogroup 12 and 33 serogroup 1 (monoclonal
subtype Bellingham) strains after pulsed-field gel electrophoresis of
SfiI-restricted chromosomal DNAs. Strains from our patient
are in boldface and are underlined. For strains that were isolated from
the same source and were indistinguishable, one representative strain
is shown.
|
|
To ensure that the causative strains in our study could be
differentiated from epidemiologically unrelated strains, we
compared
the macrorestriction patterns of 19 serogroup 12 isolates and
33 strains typed as serogroup 1, monoclonal subtype
Bellingham.
Unrelated strains displayed considerable DNA
polymorphism, as
summarized in Table
1 and Fig.
2. All three
enzymes readily grouped
identical strains isolated from the same
source.
In summary, we are certain that the three strains were transferred from
the hospital water supply to the patient. The identities
of the
clinical and environmental isolates and the DNA polymorphisms
of
unrelated
Legionella strains exclude the rehabilitation
center,
which is located at a distance of several kilometers from the
hospital, as a source of infection.
In our case, the causative strains were present in the central and
peripheral hot water supply system. They may have infected
the patient
through aerosol released from taps or following aspiration
(
4,
12). However, we are not certain how the legionellae
were
transmitted, since respiratory equipment was always filled
with sterile
water. The patient never used an incentive respirometer.
Respiratory circuits were changed daily and treated in an automatic
sterilizer. Therefore, in addition to the malignancies, paralysis
of
deglutition after surgery was probably the major risk factor
applicable
to our patient. Another possible mode of transmission
was the
aspiration of mouth rinsing fluid containing ethereal
oils, albeit this
fluid should have been diluted with sterile
water rather than tap
water. No further cases have been observed
despite intensive
surveillance by culture and serological tests.
Few cases of simultaneous infections with different
Legionella species or
L. pneumophila
serogroups have been reported (
1,
4,
5,
10,
16). The
clinical course was not different
from that for infections caused by a
single strain, and our study
probably has no relevance for antibiotic
treatment or for pathogenicity,
since all
Legionella strains
are sensitive to erythromycin, rifampin,
and ciprofloxacin
(
6). It is safe to assume that any species
or serogroup may
produce infection if a sufficiently compromised
patient is exposed to a
large inoculum, although strains may vary
in their degrees of virulence
(
3).
There are few recommendations from the literature as to the number of
colonies which should be selected for subtyping. Harrison
et al.
(
8) recommended that the number of colonies tested should
equal the square root of the number of colonies grown. Horbach
et al.
(
10) typed 10 to 20 colonies and found three of seven
infections to be caused by multiple strains. During the last 3
years,
we have observed eight cases of
Legionella pneumonia proven
by culture. In all of these cases, we serotyped 8 to 12 colonies
from
the clinical samples. Only the infection described above
involved
multiple strains.
The fact that we identified two genetically different serogroup 12 strains, from the patient and from the environment, suggests
that in
some cases serotyping, even with MAbs, is not sufficient
to
discriminate between individual strains. Thus, the clinical
isolate did
not match the environmental ones by genetic fingerprinting,
and
additional colonies had to be analyzed. The costs for MRA
were
calculated to be $22 per sample (
17). Thus, even an
intensive
molecular-typing study is much cheaper than environmental
sampling
and/or eradication measures (
7) carried out in the
wrong location,
which cost several thousand U.S. dollars. In addition,
the true
source of the infection would have remained unidentified,
serving
as a potential source for additional cases.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We are grateful to Eckhard Budde (Schwerin, Germany), Ron Fallon
(Glasgow, United Kingdom), John Kurtz (Nottingham, United Kingdom),
Matthias Maiwald (Heidelberg, Germany), Sören Uldum (Copenhagen,
Denmark), and Günther Wewalka (Vienna, Austria) for providing
unrelated L. pneumophila strains. We thank Jutta Möller, Sylvia Petsche, and Sigrid Gäbler for technical
assistance and Volker Bellmann for preparing the photographs.
This study was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Lu
485/1-2).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institut
für Medizinische Mikrobiologie und Hygiene,
Universitätsklinikum, TU Dresden, Dürerstrasse 24, D-01307 Dresden, Germany. Phone: 49-351-463-8585. Fax: 49-351-463-8573. E-mail: cl4{at}irz.inf.tu-dresden.de.
 |
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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, April 1998, p. 1160-1163, Vol. 36, No. 4
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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