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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, August 2005, p. 4152-4155, Vol. 43, No. 8
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.8.4152-4155.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Photorhabdus asymbiotica, a Pathogen Emerging on Two Continents That Proves that There Is No Substitute for a Well-Trained Clinical Microbiologist
Alice S. Weissfeld,1*
Rhonda J. Halliday,1
Dawn E. Simmons,1
Ernest A. Trevino,1
Paula H. Vance,1
Caroline M. O'Hara,2
Evangeline G. Sowers,3
Rebecca Kern,4
R. Dudley Koy,4
Kathy Hodde,4
M. Bing,4
Carson Lo,4
John Gerrard,5
Renu Vohra,6 and
Jacqueline Harper6
Microbiology Specialists Incorporated, Houston, Texas 77054,1
Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion,2
Division of Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30333,3
Memorial Herman Katy Hospital, Katy, Texas 77494,4
Gold Coast Hospital, Southport, Queensland, Australia,5
Princess Alexandra Hospital, Queensland Health Pathology and Scientific Services, Woolloongabba, Queensland, Australia6
Received 23 December 2004/
Returned for modification 24 February 2005/
Accepted 28 March 2005

ABSTRACT
A 54-year-old ranch hand presented to the emergency room with
an alleged spider bite and multiple abscesses. Both wound and
blood cultures grew
Photorhabdus asymbiotica, an enteric gram-negative
rod that was initially misidentified by the hospital's rapid
identification system. Clinical laboratories should be aware
of the limitations of their rapid identification systems and
always use them as an adjunct to analysis of morphological and
phenotypic traits.

TEXT
A 54-year-old male presented to the emergency department of
a local Houston hospital during July 2003. He was a ranch hand
who believed that he was bitten by a spider on his left breast.
He presented with multiple carbuncles on his left chest wall
and multiple pustular nodular lesions over his extremities.
The patient, who has a family history of diabetes, had a blood
sugar level of 400 on admission. His temperature was 101°F,
his blood pressure was 135/70, his respiratory rate was 20,
and his pulse was 60. Culture of the left-breast abscess showed
moderate numbers of methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus and an unremarkable gram-negative rod identified by a MicroScan
Neg Urine Combo Panel Type 34 on the MicroScan WalkAway (Dade
Behring, Inc., MicroScan Division, West Sacramento, CA) as
Pseudomonas oryzihabitans. An identical gram-negative rod was isolated from
four of four blood culture bottles from two separate venipunctures.
However, it was identified on the same system as
Providencia rustigianii. Both isolates were sent to a local reference laboratory
(Microbiology Specialists Incorporated). Each isolate produced
two colony types, which exhibited annular hemolysis and swarming
on blood agar (Fig.
1 and
2). Annular hemolysis is unusual in
that there is no hemolysis immediately around the colony but
there is a thin line (about 2 mm wide) of hemolysis about 12
mm from the edge of the colony. Each isolate was oxidase negative,
catalase positive, and motile, with a nondiffusible yellow to
dirty-brown pigment. Neither isolate reduced nitrate to nitrite,
but both fermented glucose (Table
1). The isolate was finally
identified as
Photorhabdus asymbiotica (formerly
Xenorhabdus luminescens) on the basis of weak bioluminescence when tryptic
soy agar slants grown at either 25°C or 35°C were observed
in a totally darkened room for 5 to 10 min. The organism identifications
were subsequently confirmed by the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention using conventional biochemicals (
1) and a number
of other rapid identification systems.
Table
2 illustrates the problem with correctly identifying
P. asymbiotica if a microbiologist fails to consider morphological
characteristics in addition to commercial gram-negative rod
identification results. Failure of clinical laboratories to
identify
Photorhabdus is understandable, as this organism does
not appear in the databases of the MicroScan or Vitek automated
systems or other manual bioMérieux products. In this
case, a microbiologist (R. Kern, Katy, TX) questioned why the
wound and blood isolates, which morphologically looked the same,
were identified as two different organisms on the WalkAway system.
Both isolates were finally identified by another clinical microbiologist
(R. J. Halliday) using standard biochemicals and extensive detective
work. Key reactions for the identification of this organism
include yellow pigment, nitrate not reduced to nitrite (unlike
most other
Enterobacteriaceae), annular hemolysis, swarming,
and weak bioluminescence. The misidentifications in Table
2 point out how important it is for a competent technologist to
critically review data from a rapid system. Interestingly, the
same colonial morphotypes (e.g., wound isolate no. 1 and blood
isolate no. 1) gave different results, indicating no consistency
in the rapid-system results. It seems preferable to get no identification
(API 20E) or an unacceptable identification (BBL Crystal) rather
than the wrong answer. It may also be prudent to inoculate triple-sugar
iron agar to determine an isolate's ability to ferment versus
oxidize glucose. The failure of rapid systems to elucidate this
critical reaction in most cases was a key factor in the misidentification,
as was failure to include an oxidase test. The New York State
Department of Health Clinical Bacteriology Laboratory obtained
a 100% match with
Photorhabdus asymbiotica by 16S rRNA sequencing
using the GenBank database.
Table
3 shows the susceptibility profile for each isolate. Unfortunately,
the organism identification is used by the MicroScan WalkAway
computer to interpret the susceptibility pattern. The organism
from the wound was determined to be a glucose nonfermenter,
while the blood isolate was found to be an enteric glucose-fermenting
organism. The susceptibility pattern from the WalkAway was unusual
in that the blood isolate was listed as being susceptible to
ampicillin and amoxicillin-clavulanic acid. In fact, when both
isolates were retested using Kirby-Bauer disk diffusion, the
results were different; all Kirby-Bauer results were repeated
to ensure reproducibility. The amoxicillin-clavulanic acid seemed
to be particularly affected by the temperature at which the
Mueller-Hinton plate was incubated. At the environmental temperature
(25°C) that
P. asymbiotica prefers, the isolate was resistant
to ampicillin, amoxicillin-clavulanic acid, and cephalothin.
Although environmental organisms often grow better at 25°C,
susceptibility tests performed at this temperature should carry
a disclaimer identifying them as "nonstandardized." Thus, it
is critical to correctly identify gram-negative rods to ensure
that the susceptibility results used to treat the patient produce
a clinical cure.
View this table:
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TABLE 3. Susceptibility profiles for wound and blood isolates by the MicroScan WalkAway test and Kirby-Bauer disk diffusion performed at two temperaturesa
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Photorhabdus (formerly
Xenorhabdus) (
2) was first described
in the United States by Farmer et al. in 1989 (
1). They described
six cases, including four in San Antonio, Texas. Since our isolate
is from Houston, Texas, and since Texas isolates represent 50%
of cases worldwide, it makes sense that infection due to this
species (especially in the Southwest) is probably underreported
due to incorrect laboratory identification. The two isolates
described here are only the 13th and 14th recovered worldwide.
Patients usually present with either localized soft tissue infection
or disseminated bacteremic infection, sometimes with spread
to multiple skin/soft tissue sites (
3,
4,
5). Although many
patients report an antecedent spider bite, an actual bite cannot
be proven in most cases. Thus, the source of human infection
remains unknown, although it seems likely that there is an unidentified
invertebrate vector, since
Photorhabdus spp. colonize the guts
of nematodes pathogenic for insects and human infection with
P. asymbiotica is associated with outdoor activity. Some patients
are diabetics, and some are on steroids; most have a history
of working outdoors, especially during warm, rainy months.
The ability to search the Internet for information regarding bioluminescent organisms and collaboration with colleagues in Australia sped up the identification of this organism. In fact, at the same time that we saw our Houston patient, our Australian colleagues were seeing their own patient, a 29-year-old woman with an intensely painful and swollen right foot (3). Two days before presentation, she had cleared debris and weeds from her country property while barefoot. She was started on oral amoxicillin-clavulanic acid in the emergency department, but by the next day her foot had become even more swollen, erythematous, and painful. She was admitted to the hospital and started on intravenous antistaphylococcal (flucloxacillin) antibiotics. Despite treatment, a local abscess formed (Fig. 3). This was incised, and pus was sent to the laboratory for culture. Three days later, a gram-negative rod was isolated in pure culture. The Vitek GNI card identified the organism as Flavobacterium sp. The microbiologist doubted this identification, as the colony morphology (small and round with entire edges and swarming, with a dirty-yellow pigment) did not fit the description of the genus Flavobacterium. The swarming growth and the unusual pigment raised the suspicion of the genus Photorhabdus. The isolate was confirmed as P. asymbiotica on the basis of (i) annular hemolysis on sheep blood agar, (ii) swarming growth, (iii) dirty-yellow pigment, (iv) weak bioluminescence, (v) inability to reduce nitrate to nitrite, (vi) positive citrate and urease tests, and (vii) fermentation of glucose and mannose. Subsequent Australian testing at another laboratory by the MicroScan WalkAway test using the Neg BP Combo 11 panel identified the organism as Pseudomonas oryzihabitans, and using the Rapid Neg BP 5A panel, it was identified as Shewanella putrefaciens. Although both the Vitek and MicroScan tests initially failed to identify this pathogen, the patient was switched to doxycycline and amoxicillin-clavulanate, and the wound was debrided (Fig. 4). The antimicrobial susceptibility of the Australian isolate was assessed using broth microdilution. The isolate was susceptible to a broad range of antimicrobial agents with activity against gram-negative bacteria, including fluoroquinolones, tetracyclines, and aminoglycosides, but it was resistant to ampicillin and cephalothin. The patient was ultimately treated with ciprofloxacin for 4 weeks, and her foot was completely healed 2 months later.
These cases, taken together, point out the importance of microbiologists
who are alert enough to question organism identification and
susceptibility results from commonly used automated systems.
It is incumbent on all manufacturers of miniaturized or automated
gram-negative rod systems to review their databases frequently
to prevent these types of errors.
P. asymbiotica should be added
to the respective databases as soon as possible.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Microbiology Specialists Incorporated, 8911 Interchange Drive, Houston, TX 77054. Phone: (713) 663-6888. Fax: (713) 663-7722. E-mail:
micro{at}microbiologyspecialists.com.


REFERENCES
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2 - Fisher-Le Saux, M., V. Viallard, B. Brunel, P. Normand, and N. E. Boemare. 1999. Polyphasic classification of the genus Photorhabdus and proposal of new taxa: P. luminescens subsp. luminescens subsp. nov., P. luminescens subsp. akhurstii subsp. nov., P. luminescens subsp. laumondii subsp. nov., P. temperata sp. nov., P. temperata subsp. temperata subsp. nov. and P. asymbiotica sp. nov. Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol. 49:1645-1656.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
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4 - Gerrard, J. G., S. McNevin, D. Alfredson, R. Forgan-Smith, and N. Fraser. 2003. Photorhabdus species: bioluminescent bacteria as emerging human pathogens? Emerg. Infect. Dis. 9:251-254.[Medline]
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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, August 2005, p. 4152-4155, Vol. 43, No. 8
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.8.4152-4155.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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