The genus Elizabethkingia comprises non-fermenting, non-motile, non-spore-forming, aerobic Gram-negative bacilli.
We present the first case of bacteraemia and pneumonia due to Elizabethkingia anophelis in Spain.
This was an 80-year-old woman from the United Kingdom with a history of type 2 diabetes mellitus and chronic atrial fibrillation on anticoagulation, admitted the previous month in her country of origin for pneumonia, where she was administered piperacillin-tazobactam (PTZ) 4g/6h for 10 days.
She came to Accident and Emergency with a 48-h history of progressively worsening dyspnoea with cough and haemoptysis, sweating, fever and chest pain.
The most significant findings in the blood test were increased C-reactive protein (CRP) (262mg/l) and procalcitonin (2.53ng/mL) and leucocytosis with neutrophilia (12.5×109/l).
In view of her chest X-ray findings, she was admitted to Respiratory Medicine with a diagnosis of right basal pneumonia with parapneumonic effusion, starting empirical treatment with an extended infusion of PTZ 4g/8h plus ciprofloxacin 400mg/12h.
Sputum cultures, including auramine staining, were negative.
Pleural fluid is inoculated onto BD® sheep blood agar (BA), BD® MacConkey agar (MK), BD® chocolate agar and BD® Sabouraud agar. Blood cultures were incubated in the BACTEC automated system (Becton Dickinson) and at 10h growth was detected in the aerobic flask. A Gram stain was performed where Gram-negative bacilli were visualised and blood was inoculated onto BA, MK and chocolate media. Non-haemolytic, oxidase and catalase positive, whitish colonies were observed on BA and chocolate (not on MK), incubated at 37°C in CO2 atmosphere and identified by MALDI-TOF MS (Bruker® Daltonics), as Elizabethkingia anophelis, with a score of 2.17.
The growth of the same pathogen in the pleural fluid, and in a second round of blood cultures at 26h, confirmed the aetiology, as well as the significance of the bacteraemia, ruling out contamination.
The sensitivity study was performed by Epsilon diffusion test method on Mueller-Hinton BD® (MH) agar medium with a 0.5 McFarland suspension and interpretation of the sensitivity according to CLSI M100 2022 32nd edition cut-off points for other non-Enterobacteriaceae, and is shown in Table 1.
Antibiotics tested for E. anopheles.
| Antibiotic | MIC | Interpretation | CLSI cut-off points(S) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Piperacillin/tazobactam | 256/64 | R | ≤16/4 |
| Ceftazidime | 64 | R | ≤8 |
| Ceftolozane-tazobactam | 256/4 | R | a |
| Ceftazidime/avibactam | 24/0.37 | R | a |
| Cefiderocol | 1 | S | a |
| Aztreonam | 256 | R | ≤8 |
| Ciprofloxacin | 0.5 | S | ≤1 |
| Levofloxacin | 0.25 | S | ≤2 |
| Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole | 0.38/7.22 | S | ≤2/38 |
CLSI: Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute; MIC: minimum inhibitory concentration.
A synergy test was performed for ceftazidime-avibactam plus aztreonam using the concentration gradient strip method cross-streaked at right angles on MH agar plate, and the ratio between fractional inhibitory concentrations (FIC) was 0.46 (<0.5), making it synergistic (Fig. 1).
After learning the results of the antibiogram, the regimen was changed to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole 300/1,600mg in four doses, suspended due to skin rash, plus ciprofloxacin 400mg/12h. Given the persistence of fever and inflammatory markers, it was decided to modify the treatment to ceftazidime-avibactam 2g/0.5g/8h plus aztreonam 2g/8h for 14 days, achieving clinical improvement and discharge from hospital.
The genus comprises three medically important species, Elizabethkingia anophelis, subsp endophytica and subsp anophelis, E. meningoseptica and E. miricola.1,2
Elizabethkingia spp. have been isolated in bacteraemias in both neonates and immunocompromised adults, with E. meningoseptica being associated with neonatal meningitis and anophelis species with nosocomial infection in adults, both in the context of pneumonia and catheter infection, and is considered as an emerging species. It has been increasingly reported to cause life-threatening infections and even outbreaks in humans.3,4
Predisposing risk factors for infection are intensive care unit admission, prolonged hospitalisation, use of immunosuppressants, presence of invasive devices, chronic diseases and previous use of antimicrobials.5
In our case, it could be a healthcare-associated bacteraemia, perhaps in the context of the patient's recent hospital admission.
The genus often exhibits resistance to multiple antibiotics, both through biofilm formation3,6 and through the expression of chromosomal beta-lactamases in the periplasmic space, namely an Ambler class A extended-spectrum serine beta-lactamase, which confers resistance to βlactams and class B metallobetalactamases, which hydrolyse carbapenems.7–9
In conclusion, E. anophelis is a pathogen which should be monitored because of its involvement in nosocomial infections9,10 and its resistance to multiple antibiotics.





