已发表论文

术后广泛性人型支原体感染伴血培养假阴性:一例报告

 

Authors Yu Y , Wang Y , Mao W, Wang H , Jin F , Xu W 

Received 19 June 2025

Accepted for publication 27 August 2025

Published 30 August 2025 Volume 2025:18 Pages 4549—4556

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/IDR.S548195

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 2

Editor who approved publication: Dr Hazrat Bilal

Yefu Yu, Yanan Wang, Weifang Mao, Huiyu Wang, Faxiang Jin, Wenfang Xu

Department of Clinical Laboratory, Affiliated Hospital of Shaoxing University, Shaoxing, 312000, People’s Republic of China

Correspondence: Wenfang Xu, Department of Clinical Laboratory, Affiliated Hospital of Shaoxing University, 999 Zhongxing South Road, Yuecheng District, Shaoxing, 312000, People’s Republic of China, Tel +8613857589470, Email 0052019050@usx.edu.cn

Background: Mycoplasma hominis commonly colonizes the genitourinary tract and primarily affects immunocompromised individuals. It is mostly confined to localized infections, with bloodstream dissemination being rare. Because of its fastidious nutritional requirements, the organism is seldom recovered by routine blood culture, and the absence of a cell wall renders it intrinsically resistant to many first-line antimicrobials. Consequently, the diagnosis and treatment of M. hominis bloodstream infections remain challenging.
Case Description: A 72-year-old man developed persistent fever and marked systemic inflammation after lumbar spine surgery. Despite empirical broad-spectrum antibiotics, he progressed to severe incisional infection, pulmonary infection, and effusions in multiple serous cavities—including the left interlobar fissure, pleural space, and pericardium. Routine blood and urine cultures remained negative until two weeks after surgery, when M. hominis was first isolated from incisional exudate and definitively identified by MALDI-TOF MS. The patient ultimately recovered after surgical debridement and combination therapy with doxycycline plus moxifloxacin. During this period, we used Mycoplasma-specific liquid media combined with Columbia blood agar and subsequently recovered M. hominis from the patient’s sputum, urethral swabs, and initially culture-negative blood samples. MALDI-TOF MS cluster analysis confirmed that all isolates belonged to a single clonal group responsible for disseminated infection.
Conclusion: Immunocompromised patients with postoperative indwelling catheters constitute a high-risk population for hematogenous dissemination of M. hominis. In patients with persistent fever and negative routine cultures, M. hominis infection should be actively suspected. Timely targeted mycoplasma culture and MALDI-TOF MS confirmation are essential.

Keywords: Mycoplasma hominis, postoperative infection, hematogenous dissemination, MALDI-TOF MS