Streptococcus pneumoniae-associated Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome Among Children in North America

BACKGROUND:To better characterize Streptococcus pneumoniae-associated hemolytic-uremic syndrome (SP-HUS), we report the largest series of SP-HUS among children in North America. METHODS:We surveyed pediatric members of the Emerging Infections Network to identify SP-HUS cases. Respondents contributed...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Pediatric infectious disease journal 2011-09, Vol.30 (9), p.736-739
Hauptverfasser: Banerjee, Ritu, Hersh, Adam L, Newland, Jason, Beekmann, Susan E, Polgreen, Philip M, Bender, Jeffrey, Shaw, Jana, Copelovitch, Lawrence, Kaplan, Bernard S, Shah, Samir S
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BACKGROUND:To better characterize Streptococcus pneumoniae-associated hemolytic-uremic syndrome (SP-HUS), we report the largest series of SP-HUS among children in North America. METHODS:We surveyed pediatric members of the Emerging Infections Network to identify SP-HUS cases. Respondents contributed clinical and laboratory features of these pediatric cases. RESULTS:A total of 37 cases occurring between 1997 and 2009 were submitted. Of them, 33 cases (89%) were culture-confirmed and 4 (11%) were diagnosed clinically. The median patient age was 2 years, and 28 (76%) patients had completed their heptavalent pneumococcal conjugate vaccination (PCV7) series. Most patients presented with pneumonia (84%) and bacteremia (78%), whereas other clinical manifestations such as pericardial effusion (14%) and meningitis (11%) were less common. Of 29 patients, with bacteremia 6 (21%) had S. pneumoniae concurrently isolated from cerebrospinal fluid or pleural fluid. Severe illness was common with 35 (95%) patients requiring admission to the intensive care unit, over half requiring mechanical ventilation and chest tube placement or video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery, and 27 (73%) requiring dialysis during hospitalization. Among 30 patients with follow-up of 6 months, 7 (23%) remained dialysis dependent, 3 (10%) had undergone renal transplantation, 4 (13%) had neurologic sequelae, and 1 (3%) died. Among 24 serotyped isolates, 96% were non-PCV7 serotypes, most commonly 19A (50%), 92% are included in PCV13, and 10% were penicillin nonsusceptible (minimal inhibitory concentration >2 μg/mL). CONCLUSIONS:North American children with SP-HUS had severe clinical manifestations and significant morbidity. In this series, nearly all cases were caused by serotypes that are not in PCV7 but are included in PCV13.
ISSN:0891-3668
1532-0987
DOI:10.1097/INF.0b013e3182191c58