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Clinical Microbiology Reviews, 07 1995, 336-356, Vol 8, No. 3
JL Beebe and EW Koneman
Table 6 is a summary of the organisms discussed with a listing of the
environmental source, the endogenous source, the predisposing factors
including neoplasms, and the postulated mechanisms by which the organism
can gain access to the circulation. The evidence considered indicates that
the entrance of one of these microorganisms into the bloodstream of a human
being depends on the presence of multiplicity of predisposing factors. In
the majority of cases of bacteremia due to one of these unusual organisms,
two or more predisposing factors are present. Certain predisposing factors,
such as cancer chemotherapy or intravenous catheterization, often provide a
barrier break, while others, such as liver disease, may render the host
immune system less capable of clearing organisms from the circulation. For
organisms such as Campy-lobacter, Listeria, and Salmonella spp., attributes
that allow the invasion of a healthy host are present and seem to be
enhanced by the simultaneous presence of a predisposing condition, such as
liver disease, in the host. Although somewhat fragmentary, a number of
individual case reports describe bacteremia due to one of these organisms
occurring weeks to years after surgery and after other therapeutic measures
had effected a supposed cure of a cancer. It may be speculated that cancer
patients, even after a cure, are still susceptible to bloodstream invasion
by one of the aforementioned organisms by virtue of the presence of one or
more predisposing metabolic, physiologic, or immunologic factors, even
though these factors may be cryptic. The predominance of hematologic
malignancies among cases of bacteremia due to these unusual organisms is
also apparent. Although, as pointed out by Keusch (169), the reduction in
the performance of immune function in hematologic malignancies compared
with solid tumors is likely to be responsible, other associations of
certain organisms with specific neoplasms warrant further examination. The
frequency of bloodstream infections of Salmonella typhimurium and
Capno-cytophaga canimorsus in Hodgkin's disease patients seems likely due
to a particular mechanism which infection by these species is favored. The
specific nature of these mechanisms remains to be determined. The recovery
of any unusual bacterium from blood should warrant a careful consideration
of the possibility of underlying disease, especially cancer.
Microbiologists should advise clinicians of the unusual nature of the
identified organism and provide the counsel that certain neoplastic
processes, often accompanied by neutropenia, render the human host
susceptible to invasion by almost any bacterium.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400
WORDS)
Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Recovery of uncommon bacteria from blood: association with neoplastic disease
Division of Laboratories, Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, Denver 80217, USA.
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