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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Hospital-acquired Pneumocystis pneumonia: a renewed concern?

Sharon Chen A B F , Brian Nankivell C , Carolina Firacative B , Kathy Kable C , Debbie Marriott D , Peter MacDonald E , Wieland Meyer B and Jeremy Chapman C
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Centre for Infectious Diseases and Microbiology Laboratory Services, ICPMR – Pathology West, Westmead Hospital, NSW 2145, Australia

B Molecular Mycology Research Laboratory, Centre for Infectious Diseases and Microbiology, Sydney Medical School – Western, University of Sydney, NSW 2145, Australia

C Department of Renal Medicine, Westmead Hospital, University of Sydney, NSW 2145, Australia

D Department of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, St Vincent’s Hospital, NSW 2010, Australia

E Department of Cardiology, St Vincent’s Hospital, NSW 2010, Australia

F Corresponding author. Tel: +61 2 9845 6255, Fax: +61 2 9893 8659, Email: Sharon.chen@health.nsw.gov.au

Microbiology Australia 35(1) 57-59 https://doi.org/10.1071/MA14016
Published: 4 February 2014

Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP), caused by the fungus Pneumocystis jirovecii, is a life-threatening pulmonary infection in immuncompromised hosts. Solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients are among those at increased risk, with infection attributed to reactivation of dormant colonisation1. Prior to the institution of routine antimicrobial prophylaxis, the overall incidence of PCP in SOT recipients was 5–15%, with the lowest incidence in kidney recipients (2–15%) and the highest, in lung and heart/lung recipients (10–40%)2,3. Prophylaxis with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SXZ) has reduced the risk of PCP by ≈91% and has largely eliminated PCP within the first year of transplantation. Prophylaxis is important since PCP-related mortality is as high as 60% despite treatment with TMP-SXZ2,4,5. Late infection was considered highly unusual1,6. However, the optimal duration of prophylaxis is uncertain. The occurrence of recent PCP case clusters in kidney transplant units in Europe and Asia (summarised in a review article; see reference 6)6 and in Australia7 has challenged our current appreciation of PCP as an ‘infection of the past’ outside patients with HIV/AIDS. It also gives pause to the likelihood of de novo infection, its mode of transmission and to the validity of current antimicrobial prophylactic regimens used, if any. This article outlines the clusters in Australia, hypothesises why this may have occurred and presents the recent consensus proposal for outbreak containment and prophylaxis against PCP. Details of the outbreaks in other regions are not reviewed.


In organ transplant recipients, PCP typically presents with acute breathlessness, dry cough and progressive respiratory failure with normal lung auscultation; severe infection is common1,7. In Australia, a nosocomial cluster was recognised, beginning in 2010 at a Sydney hospital and subsequently in almost half of the kidney transplant units on the eastern seaboard over a 2-year period. In the index unit, 14 transplant recipients were affected occurring 6.3 ± 5.3 years (mean ± SD) after transplantation, well beyond the hospital’s 6-month (TMP/SXZ) prophylaxis period7; this hospital experienced a second cluster following discontinuation of prophylaxis (n = 8 patients). Clusters then emerged in 10 other Sydney metropolitan and district hospitals (n = 38 patients) and seven interstate units (n = 36). In total, 95 PCP cases were identified (87 in kidney recipients, 4 in liver recipients, 1 in a liver-kidney recipient and 3 in kidney-pancreas recipients)8. There were 14 deaths (mortality 14.4%) and 10 additional kidney allograft losses8. Epidemiological investigations with detailed contact tracing in the index and other hospitals found co-localisation of case patients to common locations including that of patients cared for interstate, facilitated by travel of infected patients8. In the index hospital, independent risk factors included previous cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection (odds ratio [OR] 65.9; P < 0.001), underlying pulmonary disease (OR 10.1, P = 0.002) and transplant dysfunction (OR 1.6; P = 0.006)7. These results are consistent with an earlier study where risk factors for PCP were the number and type (steroid-resistant therapeutic modalities) of rejection treatment and CMV infection9.

Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) involving four loci (the internal transcribed spacer [ITS] 1 and 2 regions, mitochondrial large subunit [mtLSU], B-tubulin [B-tub] and dihydropteroate synthetase [DHPS] genes) targeting the known variable regions within the P. jirovecii genome was undertaken to define the molecular epidemiology of the Australian outbreak. Analysis of concatenated DNA sequences from strains recovered from patients at the index hospital revealed a predominant ‘outbreak’ sequence type (ST1) with a closely related sequence type, ST2, which differed from ST1 only by a single nucleotide polymorphism in the mtLSU region7; the B-tub and DHPS loci yielded the least genetic variability. Both ST1 and ST2 sequence types were phylogenetically distant from the prevalent circulating P. jirovecii genotypes in the community at the time of the outbreak7; MLST analysis of the remaining outbreak strains is ongoing. MLST allele types and sequence types are accessible online at: mlst.mycologylab.org.

In all instances, cohorting of all cases until patient death, or discharge in many cases, was undertaken as well as the institution of respiratory precautions. Ultimately the outbreaks were controlled by universal TMP-SXZ prophylaxis (for 12 months) in all potentially exposed patients. Sampling of air in the corridors and rooms of one transplant unit by a solid-construct inhouse protocol (unpublished) and sampling of clinic staff by analysing oral rinses yielded no P. jirovecii DNA7.

The Australian experience indicates that patient-to-patient transmission mediated by droplet spread best explains the epidemiology of the nosocomial outbreaks, supported by individual exposure history and molecular studies; this is consistent with findings from other countries6,1018. P. jirovecii strains of unique molecular-type strains have been recovered from infected transplant recipients, yet strains from different geographic regions have either been of identical genotype12,17 or have been distinct between regions15,17. Most recently, Rostved et al. observed three unique genotypes among renal and liver transplant patients affected in three distinct P. jirovecii clusters18. P. jirovecii may be recovered from air near infected patients using liquid impactor air sampling devices, although with markedly decreasing yields with increasing distance from patients10; in the single Australian unit where air sampling was attempted, P. jirovecii was not recovered from environmental air. It is highly unlikely that there was a common environmental source(s) since multiple case clusters occurred in disparate locations along the eastern seaboard of Australia. P.jirovecii has evolved as a pathogen highly specific for humans and no environmental forms have been identified19,20.

Studies in the index hospital were also unable to implicate transmission of infection from immunocompetent clinical staff populations7. Le Gal et al.11 have reported molecular evidence of colonised patients as potential infectious sources of P. jirovecii, although further evidence is required to support this hypothesis. Immunosppressive therapy in Australia at the time of the outbreaks was relatively homogenous and had changed little over 5 years16. Finally, the widespread dissemination of PCP cases and disease severity infers that the outbreak P. jirovecii strains have increased virulence, but this hypothesis is untested.

Refocussing of attention on outbreak control approaches has led to consensus Australian recommendations by the Transplantation Society of Australia and New Zealand21. These include the following recommendations: (i) transplant programs should implement immediate universal prophylaxis for all patients in the affected unit; (ii) cohorting/isolation of patients for at least 14 days after initiating PCP treatment; (iii) genotype examination; and (iv) minimum duration of antimicrobial prophylaxis following de novo transplant: kidney, 6–12 months; liver, 3 months, heart, 12 months; and lung, indefinitely.

In conclusion, with TMP-SXZ prophylaxis, the epidemiology of PCP in modern organ transplantation indicates that infection now presents late after transplantation, increasingly within clusters within hospitals, and displays identical genotypes6,7,22. Hence most infection can represent a public health problem. Genotyping of all isolates using standardised methods to identify related clusters and mandatory reporting to allow preventative measures are worthy of consideration.



Acknowledgements

The authors thank their transplant medical and nursing colleagues and infectious diseases physicians for information.


References

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Biographies

Sharon Chen is the Director of the Centre of Infectious Diseases and Microbiology Laboratory Services, ICPMR, and Senior Staff Specialist in Infectious Diseases and Microbiology, Westmead Hospital. Her research interests are in the epidemiology, diagnosis and control of infectious diseases including fungal infections in hospitals.

Brian Nankivell is a Senior Transplant Nephrologist and Renal Physician, Westmead Hospital. His research interests are transplant nephropathies, allograft rejection and transplant infectious diseases.

Carolina Firacative is a PhD student at the Molecular Mycology Research Laboratory, University of Sydney, Westmead Hospital. Her research focuses on the phenotypic and genotypic characterisation of clinically important fungal pathogens.

Kathy Kable is a Transplant Nurse Practitioner at Westmead Hospital and case manages kidney and kidney-pancreas transplant recipients. Her research interests are transplant-related infections including CMV, BK virus and fungal infections.

Debbie Marriott is a Senior Infectious Diseases and Microbiology Staff Specialist at St Vincent’s Hospital, Sydney. She is Associate Professor at the University of New South Wales and is the current president of Transplant Infectious Diseases, The International Transplant Society. Her research interests are Infectious Diseases in organ and stem cell transplantation and infections in critically ill patients.

Peter MacDonald is a Senior Cardiologist and Professor at St Vincent’s Hospital Hospital, Sydney. He is the Cardiologist of the Cardiac Transplant Unit at St Vincent’s Hospital. His interests focus on a broad range of illnesses post cardiac and heart-lung transplantation including infectious diseases.

Wieland Meyer is the Chief Scientist at the Molecular Mycology Research Laboratory, Westmead Hospital. He is Professor at the University of Sydney and research interests encompass studies in the phylogeny, epidemiology and pathogenesis of fungal infections including Pneumocystis.

Jeremy Chapman is the Clinical Director of Medicine and Cancer at Westmead Hospital, and is the Head of Renal Medicine at the hospital. He is Professor at the University of Sydney and has wide-ranging interests in transplant medicine including infectious diseases.