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- Title
Clinical and microbiological characteristics of Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates causing community-acquired urinary tract infections.
- Authors
Lin, W.-H.; Wang, M.-C.; Tseng, C.-C.; Ko, W.-C.; Wu, A.-B.; Zheng, P.-X.; Wu, J.-J.
- Abstract
Background: Klebsiella pneumoniae is the second most common species causing urinary tract infections (UTI). However, the host factors and virulence genes of K. pneumoniae related to UTI are poorly understood. The aim of this study was to analyze the capsular phenotype and virulence genes of K. pneumoniae isolates and host factors potentially relevant to community-acquired UTI. Methods: Fifty-four K. pneumoniae isolates from patients with community-acquired UTI, 76 isolates from healthy adults, and 29 from patients with community-acquired pneumonia were compared. The virulence genes ( rmpA, magA, uge, and wabG) and serotype (K1, K2, K5, K20, K54, or K57) were characterized by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The modified string test was used to determine the hypermucoviscosity. Results: Diabetes mellitus was the most frequent underlying disease among UTI patients (53.7%, 29/54). No predominant K serotype was found in UTI strains. The hypermucoviscosity phenotype and rmpA gene were more often found in UTI isolates than in those from healthy adults (27.8 vs. 2.6%, P < 0.01; 29.6 vs. 11.8%, P < 0.01, respectively), whereas no significant difference in the frequency of magA, uge, wabG, or serotype genes was found. The prevalence of rmpA was significantly lower in isolates from patients with immunosuppression, chronic renal insufficiency, and urinary tract obstruction. Multivariate analysis showed that immunosuppression was negatively associated with the prevalence of rmpA. Conclusion: Hypermucoviscosity was highly correlated with the presence of the rmpA gene in UTI strains, and rmpA may have a role in community-acquired UTI, especially in hosts without immunosuppression.
- Subjects
TAIWAN; BACTERIAL diseases; COMPUTER software; DIABETES; EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research; IMMUNODEFICIENCY; KLEBSIELLA pneumoniae; POLYMERASE chain reaction; URINARY tract infections; MICROBIAL virulence; SAMPLE size (Statistics); DATA analysis; STATISTICAL significance; DISEASE prevalence; RETROSPECTIVE studies; HOSTS (Biology)
- Publication
Infection, 2010, Vol 38, Issue 6, p459
- ISSN
0300-8126
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s15010-010-0049-5