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Epidemiology and Characteristics of Elizabethkingia spp. Infections in Southeast Asia

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10050882

Keywords

Elizabethkingia spp; antibiotic resistance; multidrug resistance; meningitis; bacteremia; outbreak; Southeast Asia

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Elizabethkingia spp. is a pathogenic bacterium that causes various diseases, especially in neonates and immunocompromised patients. Difficulties in accurately identifying the species of this bacterium using traditional methods may lead to an underestimation of the number of cases. The bacterium has an unusual antibiotic resistance pattern, suggesting an intrinsic origin for its multidrug resistance. Preventing and understanding Elizabethkingia spp. infections and limiting its spread is a new challenge.
Elizabethkingia spp. is a ubiquitous pathogenic bacterium that has been identified as the causal agent for a variety of conditions such as meningitis, pneumonia, necrotizing fasciitis, endophthalmitis, and sepsis and is emerging as a global threat including in Southeast Asia. Elizabethkingia infections tend to be associated with high mortality rates (18.2-41%) and are mostly observed in neonates and immunocompromised patients. Difficulties in precisely identifying Elizabethkingia at the species level by traditional methods have hampered our understanding of this genus in human infections. In Southeast Asian countries, hospital outbreaks have usually been ascribed to E. meningoseptica, whereas in Singapore, E. anophelis was reported as the main Elizabethkingia spp. associated with hospital settings. Misidentification of Elizabethkingia spp. could, however, underestimate the number of cases attributed to the bacterium, as precise identification requires tools such as MALDI-TOF MS, and particularly whole-genome sequencing, which are not available in most hospital laboratories. Elizabethkingia spp. has an unusual antibiotic resistance pattern for a Gram-negative bacterium with a limited number of horizontal gene transfers, which suggests an intrinsic origin for its multidrug resistance. Efforts to prevent and further understand Elizabethkingia spp. infections and limit its spread must rise to this new challenge.

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