ABSTRACT
Objective: To determine the prevalence and the characteristics of Mycoplasma pneumoniae-related community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) and parapneumonic pleural effusion (PPE) in children and adolescents. Methods: This was a retrospective observational study involving 121 patients with CAP/PPE hospitalized in a tertiary referral hospital between 2000 and 2008, divided into six groups according to the etiologic agent (G1 to G6, respectively): M. pneumoniae with or without co-infection, in 44 patients (group 1); etiologic agents other than M. pneumoniae, in 77 (group 2); M. pneumoniae without co-infection, in 34 (group 3); Streptococcus pneumoniae, in 36 (group 4); Staphylococcus aureus, in 31 (group 5); and M. pneumoniae/S. pneumoniae co-infection, in 9 (group 6). Results: In comparison with group 2, group 1 showed higher frequencies of females, dry cough, and previous use of beta-lactam antibiotics; longer duration of symptoms prior to admission; and lower frequencies of use of mechanical ventilation and chest tube drainage. In comparison with groups 4 and 5, group 3 showed higher frequencies of previous use of beta-lactam antibiotics and dry cough; longer duration of symptoms prior to admission; a lower frequency of use of chest tube drainage; a higher mean age and a lower frequency of nausea/vomiting (versus group 4 only); and a lower frequency of use of mechanical ventilation (versus group 5 only). M. pneumoniae/S. pneumoniae co-infection increased the duration of symptoms prior to admission. Conclusions: In this sample, the prevalence of M. pneumoniae-related CAP/PPE was 12.75%. Although the disease was milder than that caused by other microorganisms, its course was longer. Our data suggest that M. pneumoniae-related CAP/PPE in children and adolescents should be more thoroughly investigated in Brazil.
Keywords:
Pleural effusion; Empyema, pleural; Pneumonia; Mycoplasma pneumoniae.
RESUMO
Objetivo: Determinar a prevalência e as características da pneumonia adquirida na comunidade (PAC) e derrames pleurais parapneumônicos (DPP) relacionados a Mycoplasma pneumoniae em um grupo de crianças e adolescentes. Métodos: Estudo observacional retrospectivo com 121 pacientes hospitalizados com PAC e DPP em um hospital de referência terciária, entre 2000 e 2008, divididos em seis grupos (G1 a G6) segundo o agente etiológico: M. pneumoniae com ou sem coinfecção, em 44 pacientes; outros agentes que não M. pneumoniae, em 77; M. pneumoniae sem coinfecção, em 34; Streptococcus pneumoniae, em 36; Staphylococcus aureus, em 31; e coinfecção M. pneumoniae/S. pneumoniae, em 9, respectivamente. Resultados: Na comparação entre os grupos, G1 apresentou frequências maiores em gênero feminino, tosse seca, uso prévio de beta-lactâmicos e na duração dos sintomas até a admissão, assim como menor uso de assistência ventilatória e de drenagem torácica que G2, enquanto G3 teve maiores frequências em uso prévio de beta-lactâmicos e tosse seca, maior duração dos sintomas antes da admissão e menor frequência de uso de drenos torácicos que G4 e G5, ao passo que G3 teve média de idade maior e menor frequência de náuseas/vômitos que G4, assim como menor uso de assistência ventilatória que G5. A coinfecção M. pneumoniae/S. pneumoniae aumentou a duração dos sintomas até a admissão. Conclusões: Nesta amostra, a prevalência de PAC e DPP por M. pneumoniae foi de 12,75%. Embora a doença apresentasse quadros mais leves que aquela por outros organismos, a evolução foi mais prolongada. Nossos dados sugerem a necessidade de uma maior diligência na investigação de M. pneumoniae em crianças e adolescentes com PAC e DPP em nosso meio.
Palavras-chave:
Derrame pleural; Empiema pleural; Pneumonia; Mycoplasma pneumoniae.
IntroductionIn Brazil, the prevalence of Mycoplasma pneumoniae as the etiologic agent of parapneumonic pleural effusion (PPE) remains unknown. This is due to the difficulty in correlating M. pneumoniae with clinical characteristics; to the fact that M. pneumoniae grows little in culture media; and to the lack of rapid, specific tests in the early phase of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) with PPE.(1)
The clinical presentation of M. pneumoniae infection varies widely. The clinical course is generally moderate and self-limiting,(2-4) and pneumonia occurs in 3-10% of patients. However, severe cases of pneumonia have been described, PPE having been reported in 4-20%; although PPE is generally small and unilateral (on the side of the pulmonary infiltrate), it can be massive and bilateral.(5-7)
The importance of investigating M. pneumoniae-related CAP/PPE (with or without co-infection) lies in the fact that the microorganism does not respond to the antibiotics that are typically used in the treatment of CAP/PPE, among which are beta-lactam antibiotics.(8,9) Appropriate treatment prevents prolonged clinical manifestations and pulmonary sequelae.(6)
The objective of the present study was to compare the characteristics of M. pneumoniae-related PPE with those of PPE related to other etiologic agents in a group of children and adolescents treated at a regional referral center in Brazil.
MethodsThis was a retrospective observational study involving 121 children and adolescents with CAP/PPE hospitalized in the Hospital Infantil Nossa Senhora da Glória (HINSG, Nossa Senhora da Glória Children's Hospital), located in the city of Vitória, Brazil, between 2000 and 2008. The HINSG is a regional tertiary referral teaching hospital affiliated with the Espírito Santo State Department of Health. The present study was approved by the HINSG Research Ethics Committee (Protocol no. 34/04).
We excluded patients with neurological disease, neuromuscular disease, congenital malformation, acquired immunodeficiency, congenital heart disease, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, neoplasia, bronchiolitis obliterans, cystic fibrosis, or tuberculosis, as well as those whose data were incomplete.
During the study period, we included all of the HINSG inpatients aged 3 months to 16 years with clinical and radiological diagnosis of CAP/PPE (routine posteroanterior, lateral, and lateral decubitus chest X-rays). We included only those patients in whom the etiologic agents were found to be typical bacteria or M. pneumonia and in whom no other atypical bacteria were isolated and identified as being the sole etiologic agents.
The diagnosis of M. pneumoniae-related pneumonia was based on the finding of M. pneumoniae-positive IgM in peripheral blood by ELISA. The kit used (ImmunoWELL; GenBio, San Diego, CA, USA) has a specificity of 90% and a sensitivity of 92% (IgM in the acute phase), when compared with PCR.(10) The diagnosis of pneumonia due to typical bacteria was based on positive blood culture results or isolation of the pathogens from pleural fluid.
Between 2000 and 2008, 496 patients with CAP/PPE were admitted to the HINSG. After having applied the exclusion criteria, we initially evaluated 345 children and adolescents hospitalized for CAP/PPE; of those, 121 were included in the study on the basis of the etiologic agent, which was identified as typical bacteria or M. pneumonia, no other atypical bacteria having been isolated and identified as the sole etiologic agents (Figure 1).
The patients were divided into six groups according to the diagnosis:
group 1-M. pneumoniae-related CAP/PPE with or without co-infection with other etiologic agents
group 2-CAP/PPE due to etiologic agents other than M. pneumoniae
group 3-M. pneumoniae-related CAP/PPE without co-infection
group 4-Streptococcus pneumoniae-related CAP/PPE
group 5-Staphylococcus aureus-related CAP/PPE
group 6- CAP/PPE due to M. pneumoniae/S. pneumoniae co-infection
Patient data were encoded and entered into 2007 Microsoft Office Excel spreadsheets, having been analyzed with the Epi Info software, version 6.0. We used the chi-square test and Fisher's exact test in order to evaluate categorical and ordinal variables, as well as using ORs in order to evaluate the magnitude of the associations. In addition, we used the Student's t-test in order to compare continuous variables and ANOVA in order to compare more than two continuous variables. Descriptive statistical analysis results are presented as means, medians, and standard deviations. For all tests, the level of significance required in order to reject the null hypothesis was set at 5% (p < 0.05).
ResultsOf the 345 HINSG inpatients diagnosed with CAP/PPE, M. pneumoniae was found in 44 (12.75%). The final analysis of the clinical, radiological, and hematological profiles of the children and adolescents with PPE due to M. pneumoniae (44 patients) or other agents (77 patients) was performed by comparing the six groups.
We found no statistically significant differences between group 1 patients (with M. pneumoniae) and group 2 patients (with other etiologic agents) in terms of age. The number of patients younger than 5 years of age was found to be 31 (70.5%) in group 1 and 64 (83.1%) in group 2. The mean age was found to be 4.1 years in group 1 and 3.1 years in group 2. Regarding gender, 27 (61.4%) of the patients in group 1 were female, as were 32 (41.6%) of those in group 2, the difference being statistically significant (p = 0.03). Previous use of beta-lactam antibiotics and the need for being transferred to our facility because of treatment failure were more common in group 1 (p < 0.01 for both). In comparison with group 2, group 1 showed longer duration of symptoms prior to admission, higher frequency of dry cough, and lower frequency of nausea or vomiting (p < 0.01; p < 0.01; and p = 0.03, respectively). In contrast, the use of mechanical ventilation and chest tube drainage during hospitalization was more common in group 2 (p = 0.03 and p < 0.01, respectively). Deaths occurred only in group 2, 5 patients having died. Regarding ancillary tests, blood workup showed a predominance of immature neutrophils in group 2 (p < 0.01). In contrast, there were no statistically significant differences between the two groups in terms of C-reactive protein levels or biochemical parameters of pleural fluid. The chest X-ray finding of minimal pleural effusion (PPE < 10 mm) was more common in group 1 (p = 0.02; Table 1). In 12 of the patients in group 1, we found co-infection with other bacteria, the most common being S. pneumoniae, in 9 patients (20.5%). In group 2, S. pneumoniae was the most common etiologic agent, having been found in 36 patients (46.8%), followed by S. aureus, in 31 (40.3%; Table 2).
When we compared the patients in group 3 (M. pneumoniae without co-infection) with those in group 2, we found that the removal of the 10 cases of co-infection with typical bacteria from group 1 had virtually no impact on the variables that showed statistically significant differences (Table 1).
When we compared the patients in group 3 with those in group 4 (S. pneumoniae), we found that the mean age was 4.25 years in the former and 2.58 years in the latter (p = 0.01). Previous use of beta-lactam antibiotics prior to hospitalization and the need for being transferred to our facility because of treatment failure were more common in group 3 (p < 0.01 for both). In comparison with group 4, group 3 showed longer duration of symptoms prior to admission, higher frequency of dry cough, and lower frequency of nausea or vomiting (p = 0.02; p = 0.01; and p < 0.01, respectively). Leukocytosis was more common in group 3 (p = 0.01), whereas immature neutrophils were more common in group 4 (p < 0.01). There were no significant differences between the two groups in terms of C-reactive protein levels. Closed chest tube drainage was performed more frequently in group 4 (p < 0.01). Although open chest tube drainage was also more common in that group, the difference was not statistically significant. We found no statistically significant differences between the two groups in terms of radiological and extrapulmonary changes (Table 3).
When we compared the patients in group 3 with those in group 5 (S. aureus), we found that the mean age was 4.25 years in the former and 4.08 years in the latter, the difference being statistically insignificant (p = 0.86). Previous use of beta-lactam antibiotics prior to hospitalization and the need for being transferred to our facility because of treatment failure were significantly more common in group 3 (p < 0.01 for both). In addition, group 3 showed significantly longer duration of symptoms prior to admission and higher frequency of dry cough (p = 0.04 and p = 0.01, respectively). The use of mechanical ventilation during hospitalization was more common in group 5, and blood workup showed a larger quantity (over 5%) of immature neutrophils in that group (p = 0.04 and p < 0.01, respectively). We found no significant differences between the two groups in terms of C-reactive protein levels. Closed chest tube drainage was performed more frequently in group 5 (p < 0.01). Although open chest tube drainage was also more common in that group, the difference was not statistically significant. Although there were no significant differences between the two groups in terms of the frequency of chest X-ray changes, liver abscess was more common in group 5 (p = 0.02; Table 3).
When we compared the patients in group 6 (M. pneumoniae/S. pneumoniae co-infection) with those in group 4, we found that the mean age was 3.0 years in the former and 2.5 years in the latter, the difference being statistically insignificant. We also found that M. pneumoniae/S. pneumoniae co-infection prolonged the duration of symptoms prior to admission, the mean duration being 17 days in group 6 and 6 days in group 4 (p = 0.01; Table 4).
DiscussionIn our study sample, M. pneumoniae was found in 12.75% of the cases, similar proportions having been reported in the literature. In a study published in 2006 and involving 81 children with pleural effusion, Shen et al.(11) found S. pneumoniae, M. pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, S. aureus, Haemophilus influenzae, and other etiologic agents in 20%, 18%, 10%, 3%, 3%, and 6% of the cases, respectively. In an 11-year review published in 2006 in Spain, Deiros Bronte et al.(12) found 130 patients younger than 15 years of age with PPE, the etiologic agent having been documented in 42 (32.3%). Among those agents, the most common was S. pneumoniae (found in 42.8% of the patients), followed by M. pneumoniae (in 19%), S. aureus (in 9.5%), Streptococcus pyogenes (in 7.1%), H. influenzae (in 7.1%), Mycobacterium tuberculosis (in 4.8%), Klebsiella pneumoniae (in 2.3%), mixed anaerobic flora (in 2.3%), Coxiella burnetii (in 2.3%), and Chlamydophila pneumoniae (in 2.3%).
Pleural effusions constitute a complication of pneumonia in children and adolescents, leading to increased morbidity and mortality.(13) Despite the introduction of vaccination against S. pneumoniae, the incidence of PPE has increased fivefold in the pediatric population.(14) The causes of this increase are unknown, meaning that PPE was not caused by S. pneumoniae or S. aureus, and PPE cultures were negative for other microorganisms.(15) Therefore, it is important to understand the role of atypical microorganisms, such as M. pneumoniae, in CAP/PPE.
One limitation of the present study was that typical bacteria were identified by blood and pleural fluid culture, the sensitivity of which is far lower than is that of ELISA, which was used for the diagnosis of M. pneumonia. The sensitivity of cultures is commonly low, principally in patients who are under treatment with antimicrobial agents. In CAP, the sensitivity of blood culture has been reported to be lower than 10%, whereas in CAP/PPE the sensitivity of pleural fluid culture has been reported to be approximately 9%.(16) Had we used other diagnostic methods, we would probably have detected microorganisms in several of the 223 patients in whom no etiologic agents were identified. This would have increased, first and foremost, the positivity for S. pneumoniae. In childhood pneumonia, S. pneumoniae is the most common bacterial agent and rarely causes bacteremia, positive blood culture for S. pneumoniae being found in < 5% of cases.(16)
When we evaluated the clinical characteristics of the patients under study, we found that the mean age was higher in group 1 (M. pneumoniae) than in group 2 (other etiologic agents), i.e., 4.1 years vs. 3.1 years. Age is an important predictor of the etiologic agent in CAP.(17) According to the British Thoracic Society,(13) bacterial pneumonia is more common in children over 3 years of age; viral pneumonia is more common in younger children; and M. pneumoniae-related pneumonia is more common in school-age children. In Finland, among children hospitalized for pneumonia, the mean age of those infected with typical bacteria, M. pneumonia, and virus was found to be 39.5 months, 60.2 months, and 18.5 months, respectively.(18)
Although M. pneumoniae infection is more common in patients in the 5-25 year age bracket, it can affect patients of all ages. Waris et al.(4) reported that 21% of patients with M. pneumoniae-related pneumonia were younger than 5 years of age. Although M. pneumoniae-related pneumonia is less common in patients in that age bracket, the clinical profile tends to be more severe, the number of hospitalizations being highest among such patients. In 2004 in Finland, Korppi et al.(18) found hospitalization rates of 67%, 5%, and 9% in patients aged < 4 years, 5-9 years, and 10-14 years, respectively. It is of note that more than 70% of the patients with M. pneumonia in our study were younger than 5 years of age. The abovementioned data underscore the need for including M. pneumoniae in the differential diagnosis of PPE not only in individuals in the 5-25 year age bracket but also in those who are younger than 5 years of age.
The duration of symptoms prior to admission plays an important role in differentiating PPEs. In patients with M. pneumoniae, the onset of symptoms is generally gradual (i.e., over a period of several days), and the symptoms can persist for weeks or months.(19) In the present study, the duration of symptoms prior to hospitalization was found to be longer in the patients with M. pneumoniae than in those with other etiologic agents, specifically S. pneumoniae and S. aureus. M. pneumoniae/S. pneumoniae co-infection increased the duration of symptoms prior to admission, the mean of which was found to be 17 days for those with M. pneumoniae/S. pneumoniae co-infection and 6 days for those with S. pneumoniae alone. Therefore, prolonged PPE should raise the hypothesis of M. pneumoniae with or without co-infection.
In the present study, the bacterium that was most commonly found in association with M. pneumoniae was S. pneumoniae, having been found in 9 patients (20.5%). It has been reported that up to 30% of patients with CAP can present with M. pneumoniae/S. pneumoniae co-infection.(18)
Among the signs and symptoms, dry cough was found to be more common in the group of patients with M. pneumoniae, whereas nausea/vomiting were found to be more common in the group of patients with other etiologic agents. According to the literature, if M. pneumoniae infects the trachea, bronchi, and bronchioles, patients can experience dry cough, which is constant and uncontrollable and can cause nocturnal awakenings.(19) However, the absence of that symptom does not rule out M. pneumoniae infection.
We found that 12% of the patients with M. pneumoniae required mechanical ventilation during hospitalization, as did 25% of those with S. pneumoniae and 32.3% of those with S. aureus. In the patients with M. pneumoniae, PPE was found to be smaller, and the use of chest tube drainage was less common. These findings confirm that cases of infection with typical bacteria are more severe.
By definition, PPE is pneumonia-related pleural effusion, which can be complicated or uncomplicated. Complicated PPE is an exudate that can be purulent, culture or Gram staining revealing bacteria and biochemical analysis revealing pH < 7, glucose < 40 mg/dL, and lactate dehydrogenase > 1,000 IU/L.(20) Mocelin et al.(21) found that pleural fluid glucose < 40 mg/dL and pleural fluid pH < 7.0 had a sensitivity of 76% and 55%, respectively, for the diagnosis of complicated PPE, the sensitivity of pleural fluid pH having increased to 79% when the cut-off point was increased to 7.2. In 2010, Maranhão et al.(22) quantified total proteins in pleural fluid in order to diagnose pleural exudates. Using a cut-off point of 3.4 g/dL for total proteins in pleural fluid, the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy for the diagnosis of exudates were, respectively, 99.4%, 72.6%, and 99.2%. In our hospital, determination of lactate dehydrogenase in pleural fluid is a test that is not routinely performed.
In the present study, the characteristics of pleural fluid were useless in differentiating among the groups. Neither pleural fluid pH nor pleural fluid glucose showed statistically significant differences among the groups. The same was true for the finding of pleural fluid total proteins > 3.4 g/dL, which was less common in the patients with M. pneumoniae (60.0%) than in those with S. pneumoniae (78.6%) or S. aureus (76.2%).
Chest X-ray findings of pneumatoceles, pneumothorax, and lung abscess were of little use in differentiating among the various etiologic agents. However, liver abscess was more common in the group of patients with S. aureus, confirming hematogenous dissemination in those cases.
The usual treatment for PPE does not include drugs against M. pneumoniae, which is naturally resistant to beta-lactam antibiotics (such as penicillins, penicillin derivatives, and cephalosporins) because it has no cell wall.(23) Beta-lactam antibiotics were used prior to hospitalization in 38.0% of the patients with M. pneumoniae, in 16.7% of those with S. pneumoniae, and in 29% of those with S. aureus. Therefore, the use of beta-lactam antibiotics in children with CAP/PPE prior to hospitalization, with no improvement in the symptoms and with persistent fever, constitutes evidence for a differential diagnosis of atypical bacteria.
Our data suggest that M. pneumoniae-related CAP/PPE in children and adolescents should be more thoroughly investigated in Brazil. Prospective longitudinal studies should be able to explain the role of M. pneumoniae in PPE, principally in children younger than 5 years of age, as demonstrated in the present study.
AcknowledgementsWe would like to thank Décio Sesquim, thoracic surgeon in the HINSG Department of Pulmonology, for his aid in monitoring the cases. We would also like to thank Adyléia Aparecida Dalbo Contrera Toro, pediatric pulmonologist in the Pediatrics Department of the State University at Campinas, and Antonia Terezinha Tresoldi, tenured professor at the State University at Campinas, for their suggestions, which enriched the present study. Finally, we would like to thank the HINSG medical record department staff for their dedication and excellence in providing service.
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* Study carried out at the Federal University of Espírito Santo and the Nossa Senhora da Glória Children's Hospital, Vitória, Brazil, and at the State University at Campinas, Campinas, Brazil.
Correspondence to: Letícia Alves Vervloet. Rua Eugenio Netto 488, sala 712, Edifício Praia Office, Praia do Canto, CEP 29065-270, Vitória, ES, Brasil.
Tel. 55 27 3325-0489. E-mail: lvervloet@uol.com.br
Financial support: None.
Submitted: 19 August 2011. Accepted, after review: 1 January 2012.
About the authorsLetícia Alves Vervloet
Assistant Professor. Department of Pediatrics, Federal University of Espírito Santo, Vitória, Brazil.
Vitor Earl Cardoso Vervloet
Attending Physician. Pulmonology Ward, Nossa Senhora da Glória Children's Hospital, Vitória, Brazil.
Mário Tironi Junior
Coordinator. Pulmonology Ward, Nossa Senhora da Glória Children's Hospital, Vitória, Brazil.
José Dirceu Ribeiro
Tenured Professor. State University at Campinas, Campinas, Brazil.