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This page was updated
on March 26, 2002 to incorporate the corrections
in Vol. 8, No. 5
Letter
O157:H7 Shiga Toxin-Producing
Escherichia coli Strains Associated with Sporadic Cases of Diarrhea
in São Paulo, Brazil
To the Editor: Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC)
strains are associated with a spectrum of diseases ranging from mild to
severe bloody diarrhea and complications such as hemolytic uremic syndrome
(HUS) and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (1). Since
STEC was linked with hemorrhagic colitis in 1982 (2),
strains—particularly serotype O157:H7—have been associated with numerous
outbreaks and many sporadic cases of infections worldwide. STEC is now
a major cause of foodborne disease, primarily in the United States, Canada,
Japan, and Europe (1,3). Although most sporadic cases
and outbreaks have been reported from developed countries, human infections
associated with STEC strains have also been described in Latin American
countries, including Argentina and Chile (3). In Brazil,
STEC infections have been related to sporadic cases of nonbloody diarrhea
caused by non-O157 strains (4,5); serotype O157:H7 has
not been previously isolated from human infections in our country.
We report the characterization of three O157:H7 strains isolated in São
Paulo State, Brazil. The first strain was identified among a laboratory
collection of 2,573 E. coli strains that were retrospectively analysed
and isolated from patients with diarrhea in São Paulo State, from 1976
through 1999, at the Central Laboratory of Instituto Adolfo Lutz (IAL).
This strain was isolated in 1990 from an 18-year-old patient with diarrheal
disease who had AIDS. The two other O157 strains were recently isolated
from a 4-year-old girl with bloody diarrhea and from an adult with severe
diarrhea. Both patients were admitted to the same hospital at Campinas,
São Paulo State, in June and July 2001, respectively. The strains, isolated
by routine diagnostic procedures on MacConkey agar plates, were presumptively
identified as E. coli O157 by standard methods with specific O157
antiserum. These last two strains were confirmed as sorbitol-negative
E. coli O157 at the IAL Regional Laboratory at Campinas and were
sent to the IAL Central Laboratory for further characterization.
The three O157 E. coli strains underwent biochemical identification
and serotyping by standard methods. Enterohemolysin production was determined
according to Beutin et al. (6). Polymerase chain reaction
assays were used to detect the stx1 and stx2 genes (7),
and colony hybridization assays with specific DNA probes for stx1 ,
stx2 and eae genes were performed as described (8).
Cytotoxicity to Vero cells was assayed as described (4).
The strains were characterized as sorbitol-negative O157:H7, containing
the stx2 and eae sequences. The enterohemolytic phenotype
and production of Stx were also observed in all isolates.
To our knowledge, these O157:H7 STEC strains are the first to be associated
with human diseases in Brazil. Cultivation of stool specimens in sorbitol
MacConkey agar is strongly recommended for screening O157 strains, and,
indeed, all three strains were isolated from MacConkey agar plates. Laboratories
should attempt to examine stool specimens from all patients (children
and adults) with HUS, severe diarrhea (nonbloody and bloody stools) requiring
hospitalization, or both, as well as from patients reporting a history
of bloody diarrhea.
Despite the importance of O157:H7 serotype in causing life-threatening
complications such as HUS and the isolation of this serotype from clinical
specimens in São Paulo State, the relatively low prevalence of this serotype
in healthy dairy and beef cattle in Brazil (9), as well
as the occurrence of other non-O157 STEC strains associated with human
infections (4,5,10), suggest that E. coli O157:H7
may be not as frequent as non-O157 STEC strains in our country.
Kinue Irino,* Tânia M. Ibelli Vaz,* Maria A.M.F. Kato,* Zita V.F.Naves,†
Raquel Russo Lara,† Maria Elza Carvalho Marco,† Marilu M.M. Rocha,‡ Tânia
P. Moreira,‡ Tânia A. T. Gomes,§ and Beatriz E.C. Guth§
*Instituto Adolfo Lutz, São Paulo, Brazil; †Laboratório
de Análises Clínicas Dr João Antônio Vozza, Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil;
‡Instituto Adolfo Lutz, Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil; and §Universidade
Federal de São Paulo, Escola Paulista de Medicina, São Paulo, Brazil
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