Diverse and atypical manifestations of Q fever in a metropolitan city hospital: Emerging role of next-generation sequencing for laboratory diagnosis of Coxiella burnetii

PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2022 Apr 20;16(4):e0010364. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0010364. eCollection 2022 Apr.

Abstract

Although Q fever has been widely reported in the rural areas of China, there is a paucity of data on the epidemiology and clinical characteristics of this disease in large metropolitan cities. In this study, we profile the epidemiology and clinical manifestations of Q fever from a tertiary hospital in Shenzhen, a Southern Chinese metropolitan city with a large immigrant population from other parts of China. A total of 14 patients were confirmed to have Q fever during a nine-year-and-six-month period, five of whom were retrospectively diagnosed during case review or incidentally picked up because of another research project on unexplained fever without localizing features. Some patients had the typical exposure histories and clinical features, while a few other patients had rare manifestations of Q fever, including one with heart failure and diffuse intracapillary proliferative glomerulonephritis, a patient presenting with a spontaneous bacterial peritonitis-like syndrome, and another one with concomitant Q fever and brucellosis. Using a combination of clinical manifestation, inflammatory marker levels, echocardiographic findings and serological or molecular test results, nine, three and two patients were diagnosed to have acute, chronic and convalescent Q fever, respectively. Seven, five and two patients were diagnosed to have Q fever by serological test, nested real-time PCR and next-generation sequencing respectively. Diverse and atypical manifestations are associated with Q fever. The incidence of Q fever is likely to be underestimated. Next-generation sequencing is becoming an important diagnostic modality for culture-negative infections, particularly those that the physicians fail to recognize clinically, such as Q fever.

Publication types

  • Case Reports
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Antibodies, Bacterial
  • Cities
  • Clinical Laboratory Techniques
  • Coxiella burnetii* / genetics
  • High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
  • Hospitals, Urban
  • Humans
  • Q Fever* / complications
  • Q Fever* / diagnosis
  • Q Fever* / epidemiology
  • Retrospective Studies

Substances

  • Antibodies, Bacterial

Grants and funding

This study was partly supported by Sanming Project of Medicine in Shenzhen, China (SZSM201911014, http://wjw.sz.gov.cn/ztzl/smgc/), and FX received the award for this study. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.