已发表论文

荟萃基因组测序证实鹦鹉热衣原体肺炎的临床分析:病例系列和文献综述

 

Authors Teng XQ, Gong WC, Qi TT, Li GH, Qu Q, Lu Q, Qu J

Received 11 February 2021

Accepted for publication 21 March 2021

Published 16 April 2021 Volume 2021:14 Pages 1481—1492

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/IDR.S305790

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 3

Editor who approved publication: Professor Suresh Antony

Introduction: Chlamydia psittaci  infection is a zoonotic infectious disease, which mainly inhaled through the lungs when exposed to the secretions of poultry that carry pathogenic bacteria. The traditional respiratory specimens or serological antibody testing is slow, and the false-negative rate is high. Metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) gives a promising rapid diagnosis tool.
Methods: We retrospectively summarized the clinical characteristics of five C. psittaci  pneumonia patients diagnosed by mNGS, conducted a literature review summarizing the clinical characteristics of patients with C. psittaci  pneumonia reported since 2010.
Results: Five C. psittaci  pneumonia patients confirmed by mNGS aged from 36 to 66 years with three males. About 60% of patients had a history of contact with avian or poultry. All patients had a high fever over 38.5 °C, cough, hypodynamia, hypoxemia, and dyspnea on admission. Two patients had invasive ventilator support and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation support. Inflammatory index levels on admission and follow-up were all higher than normal values. Doxycycline or moxifloxacin and their combination therapy were used in patients. Four patients improved and were discharged, and one patient died due to multiple organ failures and disseminated intravascular coagulation. We summarized 19 articles including 69 C. psittaci  pneumonia patients and patients in 11 publications were identified by mNGS, and most patients are treated with tetracycline and quinolone with good outcomes.
Conclusion: mNGS is a promising rapid diagnosis tool, which may increase the detection rate and shorten the diagnosis time of C. psittaci  pneumonia. Further case-control studies are needed to confirm.
Keywords: Chlamydia psittaci , pneumonia, psittacosis, chlamydia, mNGS