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Case Report

Mobiluncus curtisii Bacteremia: Case Study and Literature Review

Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Infect. Dis. Rep. 2022, 14(1), 82-87; https://doi.org/10.3390/idr14010009
Submission received: 30 November 2021 / Revised: 8 January 2022 / Accepted: 11 January 2022 / Published: 14 January 2022
(This article belongs to the Section Bacterial Diseases)

Abstract

:
Background: There are few reports of bacteremia caused by Mobiluncus curtisii in the literature. We present a review of the literature in addition to a case study. Method: We describe the case of an 82-year-old patient who underwent gastrointestinal surgery and subsequently presented with dehydration, nausea, and hyperkalemia secondary to diarrhea. Further clinical work included blood cultures, and the patient was started empirically on piperacillin/tazobactam. Results: After five days, the blood culture bottle showed growth of a gram-variable, curved rod-shaped organism. After culture under anaerobic conditions on sheep blood agar, the organism was identified as Mobiluncus curtisii by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry and enzymatic technology. A review of the literature reveals five additional cases of Mobiluncus curtisii bacteremia. Conclusions: This is the sixth case in the literature describing Mobiluncus species bacteremia. This organism is rarely identified in blood culture and is most often thought of in the context of bacterial vaginosis. However, the reported cases of bacteremia show gastrointestinal symptoms and presumed gastrointestinal source of infection. The pathogenesis of infection of this organism requires further investigation.

1. Introduction

Mobiluncus species are gram variable curved rod-shaped organisms. They are non-spore-forming, motile, with somewhat tapered ends, and may present as pairs with a “gullwing” appearance when two organisms are seen in a pair with tapered ends resembling a seagull shape. In the literature, Mobiluncus species are most commonly discussed in relation to their identification in gynecologic infections, in particular, bacterial vaginosis. However, the role of this organism in bacterial vaginosis remains poorly understood. A puzzling finding is that even with the knowledge that this organism is well documented to be resistant to metronidazole, metronidazole remains a common and effective treatment for bacterial vaginosis. For an organism that is resistant to metronidazole, the treatment of bacterial vaginosis with metronidazole and its subsequent resolution would suggest that Mobiluncus is not the only organism involved in bacterial vaginosis, and there are likely many complex variables that lead to Mobiluncus species identification in association with genitourinary infections. Further research has suggested that although most commonly associated with genital infections, it may be a colonizer of the gastrointestinal tract. This is supported by cases described in a review of the literature presented here and based upon studies that tested rectal samples of patients with and without bacterial vaginosis. It is rare to isolate Mobiluncus species from an extragenital site, and here we present a case of Mobiluncus bacteremia in an 82-year-old female and a review of the literature regarding Mobiluncus bacteremia. Our patient is the sixth reported case in the literature of Mobiluncus bacteremia, helping to expand upon the limited literature surrounding this organism in the context of isolating it in blood cultures. Increased awareness of this organism in blood cultures is required to elicit more cases and to form meaningful conclusions about the virulence, origin, and clinical presentation for patients presenting with Mobiluncus bacteremia.

2. Clinical Presentation

Our patient is an 82-year-old female with a history of diabetes mellitus type 2, hypertension, coronary artery disease, and chronic kidney disease. She had a prolonged hospitalization three months prior to the reported bacteremia due to a small bowel bleed caused by angiodysplasia. She underwent a small bowel resection procedure with ileostomy formation followed by multiple recurrent gastrointestinal operations due to post-operative complications. More recently, she presented to the Emergency Department with complaints of diarrhea and dehydration three months after her hospitalization for the small bowel resection. After initial emergency room testing, she was transferred to a nearby hospital due to an initial finding of hyperkalemia. Of note, two initial blood cultures were drawn in the Emergency Department. After transfer to the hospital, along with the hyperkalemia, the patient was noted to have laboratory findings consistent with acute tubular necrosis/acute renal failure presumably due to severe volume depletion as a result of ileostomy/diarrheal loss. Rehydration with intravenous fluids normalized her renal function. She was discharged nine days after an emergency department visit and hospital admission. Importantly, the prior bowel resection procedure left the patient with a large midline, recovering incision, which was noted to be healing with a wound vac in place at the time of this hospital admission. Urinalysis at the hospital showed many bacteria and a large amount of blood. Computed tomography (CT) imaging showed findings consistent with cystitis, and the patient was empirically started on piperacillin/tazobactam. The presumption was that the patient was septic from a urinary tract infection.

3. Materials and Methods

The blood cultures collected at the Emergency Room on initial presentation were documented as a gram-positive rod on Gram’s stain. The Gram’s stain result was faxed and called to the hospital five days into the admission. The blood culture bottle was then received a day after the Gram’s stain result was called at the University of Minnesota Infectious Diseases Diagnostic Lab as an anaerobe referral for definitive identification. The organism was cultured on a blood agar plate under anaerobic conditions (Figure 1a), and the colony Gram’s stain showed gram-variable, curved rod-shaped organisms (Figure 1b). The organism was identified as Mobiluncus curtisii by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry (Vitek MS, bioMérieux, Marcy l’Etoile, France) at a confidence level of 99.9% and as Mobiluncus curtisii by enzyme technology using the RapID™ ANAII system for anaerobic bacteria (ThermoFisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) at a probability of >99.9%. A limitation of our study is that data from sequencing are not available, as it is not routinely performed for identification in our laboratory. Therefore, it is highly probable, but not 100% certain, that this organism was correctly identified as Mobiluncus curtisii by two separate testing modalities.

4. Discussion

The Mobiluncus genus is subdivided into two species, Mobiluncus mulieris and Mobiluncus curtisii (which is even further subdivided into subspecies Mobiluncus curtisii subsp. curtisii and Mobiluncus curtisii subsp. holmesii) [1]. Mobiluncus curtisii subspecies curtisii is typically a gram-variable, curved rod-shaped, non-spore-forming, motile organism with tapered ends, occurring singly or in pairs with a “gullwing” appearance. Clusters of two to six flagella which are longer than the bacterial cells, have been observed on electron micrographs. Although the Gram’s stain reactions of the curved, rod-shaped organisms are reported as variable, electron micrographs reveal multilayered gram-positive cell walls lacking an outer membrane. Even in this case, the initial callback stated that the organism was gram-positive, whereas after identification at the University of Minnesota, the organism was identified as gram-variable, but as seen in Figure 1b, shows a predominantly gram-negative type staining with only rare gram-positive organisms. Gardnerella vaginalis, another gram-variable organism, also has a multilayered wall. The thinness of the peptidoglycan layer may explain the tendency of the curved rod-shaped organisms to stain gram-negative. Based upon observations of this organism in culture, young cultures tended to show more gram-positive staining [2]. The apparent absence of an outer membrane suggests that Mobiluncus species more closely resemble gram-positive organisms than gram-negative organisms. This conclusion is supported by reports that these organisms are resistant to colistin and nalidixic acid and are susceptible to penicillin, ampicillin and vancomycin. Hydroxy fatty acids, commonly found in gram-negative cell walls, are absent in these organisms [2]. Moreover, DNA sequencing places the organism in the family Actinomycetaceae, which is a family of gram-positive organisms [3].
Mobiluncus species have been shown to be associated with isolates from patients with bacterial vaginosis [4]. Because Mobiluncus curtisii and Mobiluncus mulieris do not produce putrescine or cadaverine in peptone-starch-dextrose broth supplemented with lysine and ornithine, these species are not the source of the amine odor associated with bacterial vaginosis [2]. One published study by author Holst [5] showed that Mobiluncus species were isolated from 97% of patients with bacterial vaginosis. A later study by Schwebke et al. [6] showed a similar result using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) that Mobiluncus species were identified in 84.5% of women with bacterial vaginosis and only 38% of women without bacterial vaginosis infection. Moreover, Mobiluncus curtisii, specifically, was rarely detected in women without bacterial vaginosis, and it was found in 65.3% of women with bacterial vaginosis [7]. The pathogenic role of Mobiluncus is still unclear in bacterial vaginosis since Mobiluncus species are usually resistant to metronidazole, which is an effective treatment for most cases of bacterial vaginosis [6]. Holst [5] also showed, of those women with bacterial vaginosis, 45 to 62% had Mobiluncus species isolated from concurrent rectal samples, whereas Mobiluncus was isolated from only 10 to 14% of the rectums of women without bacterial vaginosis.
Additionally, Holst [5] reported that 5–11% of men and children had Mobiluncus species isolated from rectal samples. These findings caused researchers to deliberate if this organism resides in the gastrointestinal tract and may not be primarily thought of as a genital bacterium. If the intestinal tract is the main reservoir for Mobiluncus species, it could be presumed that an acute abdominal problem may allow dissemination and initiate bacteremia. Alternatively, as a possibility, in this case, the bacteria may have spread from the genitourinary space or the ileostomy site to nearby damaged skin or the relatively nearby large midline surgical incision. Given the extensive gastrointestinal surgeries and healing ileostomy site, the presumed source, in this case, is gastrointestinal; however, travel from the genitourinary space to nearby damaged epithelium cannot be entirely ruled out.
Extragenital infection by Mobiluncus is rare and has been reported in breast abscesses and bacteremia [1]. To our knowledge, this is only the sixth case of Mobiluncus bacteremia reported in the literature (Table 1). Four patients, including ours, had Mobiluncus curtisii identified. Of the five cases of Mobiluncus bacteremia reported in the literature, four cases were female. The average age of the reported patients, including our case, is 51 years, with a range from 35 years to 82 years. Two cases of Mobiluncus bacteremia showed life-threatening (severe hypotension) or fatal infections. One patient diagnosed with Mobiluncus bacteremia did not survive, related to a massive intracerebral hemorrhage of unknown cause. One patient had no reported comorbidities suggesting that this unusual bacteremia can affect people who are presumably immunocompetent. Most of the reported cases presented with fever, and all cases had some report of gastrointestinal disturbances, including nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, or abdominal pain. The presumed origin, based upon the case reports of the bacteremia, was the gastrointestinal tract in four patients, including this patient [8,9,10], with the other two sources presumed to be uterine [11] and unknown [1]. Treatment with an antibiotic led to full recovery in all but one patient. In our case, the patient was treated empirically with piperacillin/tazobactam for a presumed urinary tract infection. The only organism identified by microbiology culture was on the blood culture from the Emergency department, which was identified as Mobiluncus curtisii by the Infectious Diseases Diagnostic Lab at the University of Minnesota. In the reported cases, the blood culture bottle signaled a positive culture in as little as 24 h to as much as 9 days; this may be related to bacterial load in each individual. The person with Mobiluncus bacteremia who did not recover had a positive blood culture after 5 days, which would not support a correlation between the time to a positive culture and clinical course. However, the patient who presented with severe hypotension had a positive blood culture signal after 24 h of incubation, so there may be a relationship between clinical presentation and time to positive culture for this organism. Our understanding of this relationship will be improved as more case reports are published. For those cases with reports of antibiotic resistance, most showed resistance to metronidazole, consistent with the literature and are susceptible to many different antibiotics. The case of Mobiluncus bacteremia caused by Mobiluncus mulieris was sensitive to metronidazole, consistent with what is reported in the literature. Interestingly, three of the five reported cases had metabolic panels which showed transaminitis, and one patient even presented with jaundice and hepatomegaly. This could indicate that Mobiluncus species may cause liver injury. As more cases continue to be reported in the literature, our ability to draw meaningful conclusions regarding infection with this organism will improve tremendously.
The pathogenesis of infection with and virulence factors of Mobiluncus curtisii are still not completely understood. One study, by author Zeng [12], showed that in the Mobiluncus curtisii genome, there is a genomic fragment encoding a 25 kDa pore-forming toxin, the CAMP factor, which is known to be involved in the synergistic lysis of erythrocytes, namely the CAMP reaction. Additionally, another study by Menolascina et al. [13] suggested that both Mobiluncus curtisii and Mobiluncus mulieris cells have the capacity to adhere, mediated by adhesin, in the absence of glucose or mannose. Lastly, Taylor-Robinson et al. [14] showed that the centrifuged supernatants of cultures of Mobiluncus curtisii and Mobiluncus mulieris had a toxic effect on epithelial cells, corroborated by the Menolascina et al. group. These factors taken together, in the appropriate growth conditions, could allow Mobiluncus curtisii to adhere to and destroy epithelial cells allowing entry of the organism into the bloodstream from a source of colonization, either the gastrointestinal tract or the genitourinary tract. As more cases of Mobiluncus species bacteremia are published we will begin to understand more of the ecology and the pathogenesis of infection with this organism.

5. Conclusions

Our case is only the sixth case reported in the literature describing Mobiluncus species bacteremia. Mobiluncus curtisii is rarely identified in blood culture and is most often thought of in the context of bacterial vaginosis. However, the patients with Mobiluncus bacteremia most often present with gastrointestinal symptoms including diarrhea, abdominal pain, and transaminitis, and the gastrointestinal tract is presumed to be the source of infection. The pathogenesis of infection with this organism requires further investigation. Continued attention to this organism will inevitably lead to new case reports and further understanding of this rarely reported bacteremia with Mobiluncus bacterial species.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, C.A. and P.F.; writing—original draft preparation, C.A.; writing—review and editing, C.A. and P.F. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Informed Consent Statement

General informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Acknowledgments

Infectious Diseases Diagnostic Laboratory (IDDL) staff at the University of Minnesota Medical Center.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

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Figure 1. (a) Image of the sheep blood agar plate grown in anaerobic conditions showing colorless, translucent, smooth, convex colonies after 5 days of incubation. (b) Image of Gram’s stain at 1000× magnification, with oil immersion. The organism was curved and rod-shaped, gram-variable, and a predominant gram-negative staining pattern was displayed here.
Figure 1. (a) Image of the sheep blood agar plate grown in anaerobic conditions showing colorless, translucent, smooth, convex colonies after 5 days of incubation. (b) Image of Gram’s stain at 1000× magnification, with oil immersion. The organism was curved and rod-shaped, gram-variable, and a predominant gram-negative staining pattern was displayed here.
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Table 1. Clinical and laboratory features of reported Mobiluncus bacteremia cases.
Table 1. Clinical and laboratory features of reported Mobiluncus bacteremia cases.
Age, Sex [Reference]Organism IdentificationIncubation Time to Positive Blood Culture NotificationPresumed Bacteremia OriginSusceptibilitiesPresenting Signs and SymptomsComorbid ConditionsLab TestsOutcome
39, F [8]Mobiluncus spp.9 daysG.I. tractS: Penicillin Gentamicin, Clindamycin;
R: Metronidazole, cotrimoxazole;
NK: Cefazolin
Confusion
Abdominal pain Diarrhea
Jaundice
Hepatomegaly
Fever (38 °C)
Alcoholic Liver diseaseWBC: 5.8
Plt 90
Hgb: 9.1
Metabolic panel: Transaminitis
Recovery
33, F [11]Mobiluncus curtisii3 daysUterusS: Amoxycillin, Cefoxitin, Gentamicin, Clindamycin;
R: Metronidazole
Headache
Abdominal pain Vomiting.
Fever (38.8 °C)
Spontaneous abortion
Hepatitis B
Streptococcal antigen positive
WBC: 9.8
Plt: 153
Hgb: 10.9 Metabolic Panel: within normal limits
Recovery
62, F [9]Mobiluncus mulieris2 daysGI tract (Perforated colon, intraabdominal abscesses)S: Metronidazole; R: Not statedConfusion
Abdominal pain Vomiting
Afebrile
tachycardia (120 bpm)
Diabetes, atrophic uterusWBC: 21.1 Metabolic Panel: Not statedRecovery
54, F [1]Mobiluncus curtisii curtisii24 hNot knownS: Penicillin, Cefotaxime;
R: Metronidazole
Confusion
Headache
Abdominal pain Vomiting
Fever (38.3 °C)
Hypotension (56/35 mmHg) Tachycardia (120 bpm)
NoneWBC: 4.8
Plt: 39
Hgb: 12.9
Metabolic Panel: Transaminitis
Recovery
35, M [10]Mobiluncus curtisii5 daysGI tract (ulcerative colitis)Not statedAnorexia
Weakness
Falls
Unconscious (massive left sided intracerebral hemorrhage)
Fever (>38.5 °C)
Ulcerative colitis alcoholismWBC: 7.5.
Plt: 44.
Hgb: not stated Metabolic Panel: Transaminitis
Death
82, F (our case)Mobiluncus curtisii5 daysGI tract (angiodysplasia status post small bowel resection and ileostomy)S: Penicillin, Clindamycin, Cefotaxime, Meropenem, Amoxicillin/Clav. R: MetronidazoleNausea
Dehydration
Diarrhea
Hyperkalemia
Cystitis
Afebrile
Diabetes angiodysplasia of bowel (status post resection, ileostomy)WBC: 16.
Plt: 437
Hgb: 13.2
Metabolic Panel: Renal Failure
Recovery
WBC, peripheral blood white blood cell count (× 109/L); Plt, platelet count (× 109/L); Hgb, hemoglobin concentration (g/dL). S, sensitive; R, resistant; NK, not known.
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MDPI and ACS Style

Arries, C.; Ferrieri, P. Mobiluncus curtisii Bacteremia: Case Study and Literature Review. Infect. Dis. Rep. 2022, 14, 82-87. https://doi.org/10.3390/idr14010009

AMA Style

Arries C, Ferrieri P. Mobiluncus curtisii Bacteremia: Case Study and Literature Review. Infectious Disease Reports. 2022; 14(1):82-87. https://doi.org/10.3390/idr14010009

Chicago/Turabian Style

Arries, Cade, and Patricia Ferrieri. 2022. "Mobiluncus curtisii Bacteremia: Case Study and Literature Review" Infectious Disease Reports 14, no. 1: 82-87. https://doi.org/10.3390/idr14010009

APA Style

Arries, C., & Ferrieri, P. (2022). Mobiluncus curtisii Bacteremia: Case Study and Literature Review. Infectious Disease Reports, 14(1), 82-87. https://doi.org/10.3390/idr14010009

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