Legionella pneumophila serogroup 5 infection in the presence of multiple environmental contamination. The importance of a bacteriological diagnosis

Authors

  • Maria Teresa Montagna Regional Centre for Legionellosis Surveillance, Department of Biomedical Science and Human Oncology, University of Bari, Italy
  • Maria Luisa Ricci Department of Infectious, Parasitic and Immunomediate Diseases, Laboratory of National Reference for Legionella, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Roma, Italy
  • Christian Napoli Regional Centre for Legionellosis Surveillance, Department of Biomedical Science and Human Oncology, University of Bari, Italy
  • Daniela Tatò Regional Centre for Legionellosis Surveillance, Department of Biomedical Science and Human Oncology, University of Bari, Italy
  • Maria Scaturro Department of Infectious, Parasitic and Immunomediate Diseases, Laboratory of National Reference for Legionella, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Roma, Italy
  • Giovanna Barbuti Department of Biomedical Science and Human Oncology, University of Bari, Italy
  • Giuseppe Pierucci Operative Unit of Respiratory Diseases 1^ Ospedaliera, Policlinico of Bari, Italy
  • Maddalena Castellani Pastoris Department of Infectious, Parasitic and Immunomediate Diseases, Laboratory of National Reference for Legionella, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Roma, Italy

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2427/5906

Keywords:

Legionella spp, legionellosis, bacteriological diagnosis, epidemiology

Abstract

Legionella pneumophila is a pathogen that causes severe pneumonia in humans; L. pneumophila serogroup 1 accounts for at least 90% of infections. This is not linked to an environmental predominance of Legionella pneumophila 1, but may be due to a greater virulence of the strain. L. pneumophila sg 5 has also been reported, albeit less frequently, to be a cause of the disease. We report a case of L. pneumophila sg 5 occurring in a large hospital in southern Italy (Apulia region), where both L. pneumophila sg 1 and sg 5 were detected in the water supply; the nosocomial origin was demonstrated by molecular subtyping (PFGE). An environmental investigation, performed immediately after diagnosis of the case of legionellosis, identified a ow L. pneumophila sg 5 contamination level. Our experience highlights that in hospital, risk assessment, in rder to institute control measures for Legionella, should be carried out not only in response to a case of the disease and/or in risk wards only, as described in the Italian Guidelines, but periodically in every ward. The present study confirms that, although in the community L. pneumophila sg 1 is the most frequent strain isolated in both outbreaks and isolated cases, in hospital other serogroups and species may often cause infection because of the high susceptibility of the hosts.

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Published

2024-05-07

Issue

Section

Long Paper