Pleural Empyema Caused by Streptococcus intermedius and Fusobacterium nucleatum: A Distinct Entity of Pleural Infections.

Ruben Dyrhovden,Tomas Mikal Eagan, Øystein Fløtten,William Siljan,Truls Michael Leegaard, Bjørnar Bø, Hilde Fardal, Fredrik Grøvan,Arne Kildahl-Andersen,Kjersti Wik Larssen,Rune Tilseth,Reidar Hjetland,Sigbjørn Løes, Frode Lindemark, Marit Tellevik, Rebecca Breistein,Øyvind Kommedal

Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America(2023)

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摘要
BACKGROUND:Many community-acquired pleural infections are caused by facultative and anaerobic bacteria from the human oral microbiota. The epidemiology, clinical characteristics, pathogenesis, and etiology of such infections are little studied. The aim of the present prospective multicenter cohort study was to provide a thorough microbiological and clinical characterization of such oral-type pleural infections and to improve our understanding of the underlying etiology and associated risk factors. METHODS:Over a 2-year period, we included 77 patients with community-acquired pleural infection, whereof 63 (82%) represented oral-type pleural infections. Clinical and anamnestic data were systematically collected, and patients were offered a dental assessment by an oral surgeon. Microbial characterizations were done using next-generation sequencing. Obtained bacterial profiles were compared with microbiology data from previous investigations on odontogenic infections, bacteremia after extraction of infected teeth, and community-acquired brain abscesses. RESULTS:From the oral-type pleural infections, we made 267 bacterial identifications representing 89 different species. Streptococcus intermedius and/or Fusobacterium nucleatum were identified as a dominant component in all infections. We found a high prevalence of dental infections among patients with oral-type pleural infection and demonstrate substantial similarities between the microbiology of such pleural infections and that of odontogenic infections, odontogenic bacteremia, and community-acquired brain abscesses. CONCLUSIONS:Oral-type pleural infection is the most common type of community-acquired pleural infection. Current evidence supports hematogenous seeding of bacteria from a dental focus as the most important underlying etiology. Streptococcus intermedius and Fusobacterium nucleatum most likely represent key pathogens necessary for establishing the infection.
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pleural infection,Fusobacterium nucleatum,Streptococcus intermedius,16S rRNA,next-generation sequencing
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