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Volume 24, Number 7—July 2018
Research Letter

Rat-Bite Fever in Human with Streptobacillus notomytis Infection, Japan

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Author affiliations: Nara Medical University, Nara, Japan (Y. Ogawa, K. Kasahara, S.T. Lee, R. Nakano, H. Yano, K. Mikasa); Osaka Gyoumeikan Hospital, Osaka, Japan (T. Ito, H. Hasegawa, S. Hirose, S. Santo, A. Yoshida)

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Abstract

We report a case of rat-bite fever in a 94-year-old woman with Streptobacillus notomytis infection. We established an epidemiologic link between exposure to rats and human infection by performing nested PCRs that detected S. notomytis in the intraoral swab specimens obtained from rats captured in the patient’s house.

Streptobacillus is a genus of gram-negative, filamentous, rod-shaped bacilli belonging to the family Leptotrichiaceae. Since 2014, four novel species other than S. moniliformis have been reported: S. hongkongensis was isolated from 2 human patients, S. felis from the lung of a cat, S. ratti from black rats, and S. notomytis from a spinifex hopping mouse (14). We report a case of a human infection with S. notomytis.

A 94-year-old woman sought treatment at our hospital for general malaise, anorexia, and bilateral knee pain. At admission, her body temperature was 38°C; physical examination revealed swelling in both knees. Her skin was intact, with no rashes or animal bites. Laboratory tests revealed high leukocyte count (1.42 × 109 cells/L) and elevated level of C-reactive protein (19.5 mg/dL).

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Thumbnail of Gram staining of pus obtained from a patient with rat-bite fever. Circles indicate pyrophosphate calcium crystals. Arrows indicate chain-shaped gram-negative bacilli. Original magnification ×1,000.

Figure. Gram staining of pus obtained from a patient with rat-bite fever. Circles indicate pyrophosphate calcium crystals. Arrows indicate chain-shaped gram-negative bacilli. Original magnification ×1,000.

Bilateral knee arthrocentesis yielded 25 mL of purulent fluid; Gram stain demonstrated the presence of few, thin, gram-negative bacilli with pyrophosphate calcium crystals and neutrophils (Figure). Bacterial culture yielded transparent, small, smooth colonies on 5% sheep blood agar (Kyokuto, Tokyo, Japan) incubated at 37°C under 5% CO2 for 48 h. However, the automated bacterial identification method (Vitek 2; bioMérieux, Tokyo, Japan) failed to identify the isolate. We evaluated the isolate (NR2245) by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry using Bruker MALDI BioTyper software version 4.001 library database (Bruker Daltonik GmbH, Bremen, Germany) employing ethanol–formic acid extraction. We identified the isolate as S. moniliformis (score: 1.608, 24 h). The database included only 1 entry from S. moniliformis, DSM 12112T.

We administered ceftriaxone. Subsequent results of arthrocentesis and blood cultures (BacT/ALERT; bioMérieux) were negative; however, the patient’s fever and bilateral knee pain persisted. Transthoracic echocardiography showed no evidence of infective endocarditis. We replaced ceftriaxone with sulbactam and ampicillin on hospital day 16, followed by intraarticular administration of dexamethasone on day 17 for pseudogout (diagnosed by the presence of pyrophosphate calcium crystals). On day 20, we performed bilateral knee lavage; thereafter, the patient’s fever and knee pain resolved. The surgery specimen was serous fluid; results of Gram stain and aerobic and anaerobic culture were negative. On day 30, we replaced sulbactam/ampicillin treatment with oral minocycline (100 mg every 12 h) as maintenance therapy; however, pneumonia developed, and the patient died of respiratory failure on day 56. We detected Acinetobacter baumannii complex and Enterococcus faecium from the sputum; however, we did not detect Streptobacillus species.

To identify the isolate from the patient’s synovial fluid, we performed 16S rRNA gene sequencing using a universal primer pair: 27F (5′-AGAGTTTGATCC TGGCTCAG-3′) and 1492R (5′-GGTTACCTTGTTACGACTT-3′). The sequence (GenBank accession no. LC360808) showed 100% identity (1,380/1,380 bp) to S. notomytis AHL_370–1T (GenBank accession no. KR001919) and 98.55% (1,360/1,380 bp) identity to S. moniliformis DSM12112T (GenBank accession no. CP001779) in the EzBioCloud 16S database (http://www.ezbiocloud.net/eztaxon). We performed PCR and sequencing of housekeeping genes (groEL and gyrB) using Streptobacillus species–specific primers (5). BLAST search (http://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast.cgi) revealed that the groEL (GenBank accession no. LC371754) and gyrB (GenBank accession no. LC371753) sequences showed 100% identity to the gene sequence of S. notomytis KWG2 (522/522 bp and 758/758 bp, respectively) and 99.6% 5(20/522 bp) and 99.9% (757/758 bp) identity, respectively, to the gene sequence of S. notomytis AHL_370–1T.

We determined antimicrobial susceptibility pattern by broth microdilution. MIC of penicillin was <0.06 µg/mL; cefazolin, <0.5 µg/mL; ceftriaxone, 0.25 µg/mL; vancomycin, <0.25 µg/mL; clarithromycin, 8 µg/mL; minocycline, <0.12 µg/mL; and levofloxacin, <1 µg/mL.

S. moniliformis is known to cause rat-bite fever in humans (6). To study the association between exposure to rats and S. notomytis infection, we visited the patient’s house after her death and captured 2 rats (Rattus rattus), from which we collected stool and intraoral and rectal swab samples. On the same day, we brought the specimens at room temperature to our laboratory and performed bacteriological cultures in 5% sheep blood agar, incubated at 37°C under 5% CO2; the specimens did not grow Streptobacillus. We performed nested PCR with DNA extracted from each specimen, amplified the 16S rRNA gene using the universal primer pair 27F and 1492R, and performed nested PCR using the amplicons from the first PCR as templates, with the Streptobacillus-specific primers sbmF (5′-GAGAGAGCTTTGCATCCT-3′) and sbmR (5′-GTAACTTCAGGTGCAACT-3′) (7). Only 1 rat’s intraoral specimen yielded PCR products, and the sequence of the amplicon by nested PCR showed 100% identity (1,089/1,089 bp) to S. notomytis AHL_370–1T.

Since 2014, a total of 4 novel Streptobacillus species have been reported. Whether these new species have recently emerged or existed previously is uncertain. In 2014, Eisenberg et al. identified 2 isolates recovered from rats in 2008 as S. notomytis (2); it is possible that S. notomytis may have been prevalent but underrecognized in Japan because identification is difficult by conventional methods (2). Fukushima et al. reported that 16S rRNA sequencing identified an isolate obtained from a rat-bite fever patient as S. notomytis, not S. moniliformis as originally identified (8). By detecting S. notomytis from the rats captured in this patient’s house, we support a potential epidemiologic link between rat exposure and human infection.

Dr. Ogawa is a medical doctor at Nara Medical University Hospital. His primary research interest is HIV and the epidemiology of infectious diseases, with a focus on resistant pathogens.

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Acknowledgment

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References

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Cite This Article

DOI: 10.3201/eid2407.171580

Table of Contents – Volume 24, Number 7—July 2018

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Kei Kasahara, Center for Infectious Diseases, Nara Medical University, Shijo-cho 840, Kashihara, Nara, Japan

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Page created: June 18, 2018
Page updated: June 18, 2018
Page reviewed: June 18, 2018
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