Both, Limited and Often Fatal Systemic Infections Caused by <i>Leuconostoc</i> spp. in Older, Previously Ill Men Are Usually Acquired in the Outpatient Setting
2025
Johanna Butt | Cristian Arva | Stefan Borgmann
<i>Leuconostoc</i> spp. are vancomycin-resistant Gram-positive cocci that are used in food production and as pre- and probiotics. However, <i>Leuconostoc</i> spp. can also cause infections. In the present study, the records of patients with <i>Leuconostoc</i> spp. detection between January 2012 and March 2025 were analyzed, inclusive of the underlying risk factors. <i>Leuconostoc</i> spp. was isolated from 32 patients (21 male, 11 females), including nine patients with blood culture evidence. In the majority of patients, <i>Leuconostoc</i> spp. were obtained on the day of admission to the hospital or in the first few days thereafter, arguing against nosocomial acquisition. The median age of men and women (65.3 and 67.8 years) was similar, but seven of the 14 male patients over the age of 65 had the bacteria in blood culture. The female patients with blood culture evidence had suffered from peripartum thrombophlebitis and from anorexia nervosa (BMI 8.8 kg/m<sup>2</sup>). In contrast, men with <i>Leuconostoc</i> spp. in the blood culture had severe, limiting underlying diseases. While the two women survived, five of the seven blood-culture-positive men died. Overall, our results show that <i>Leuconostoc</i> spp. is mainly acquired in outpatient settings, but men are at a higher risk of acquisition. Colonized men over the age of 60 with severe underlying diseases have a high risk of systemic infection with a fatal outcome.
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