Vibrio cholerae
From IDWiki
Vibrio cholerae
Background
- Causes cholera, a severe diarrheal illness that is transmitted with the fecal-oral route (food or water), and specifically associated with improper sanitation
Microbiology
- Curved, motile Gram-negative bacillus within the class Gammaproteobacteria, family Vibrionaceae, and genus Vibrio
- Oxidase positive and facultatively anaerobic
- Serotypes differ in O-specific polysaccharide (OSP) chains of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), and are grouped into more than 200 serogroups
- Serogroups O1 and O139 cause epidemic cholera, while other serogroups cause mild gastroenteritis
- Serogroup O1 is divided into serotypes Inaba and Ogawa
- El Tor is a specific biotype of serotype O1
- Halophylic, can grow in salt water with organic material
Pathophysiology
- Ingestion of contaminated water leads to small intestine colonization mediated by TCP (toxin coregulated pili)
- Vibrio is non-invasive but rather causes toxin-mediated disease
- VP1 pathogenic island is associated with pandemic strains of cholera and confers severity
- Severe secratory diarrhea cause by the virulence factor cholera toxin (CT)
- CT causes severe secretory diarrhea
- CT comprises 1 A subunit and 5 B subunits
- It enters epithelial cells by binding of B subunit to a glycosphingolipid, GM1
- Inside the cell, it increases activity of adenylyl cyclase, causing an increase in cAMP, which causes chloride ion secretion
- CT is encoded by ctxAB genes, which were added to TCP-positive V. cholera by a bacteriophage
Epidemiology
- Fecal-oral transmission, with humans being only known host
- Survives in brackish water
- 3-5 million people affected annually
- 100-120,000 deaths annually, but likely underestimated
- Typically in poor countries with poor sanitation
- Seven pandemics described since 1817
- The seventh and current pandemic started in Indonesia in 1961, and is currently still circulating
- The current strain is biotype El Tor within serotype O1
Risk Factors
- Limited access to clean water and sanitation
- In endemic countries, those less than 4 years of age
- In newly affected countries, everyone is at risk
Clinical Manifestations
Cholera
- Incubation period Usual incubation period::2 hours to 5 days, depending on the size of the inoculum
- Profuse painless watery diarrhea with rice-water stools, up to 1 L/h when severe
- Abdominal cramping and nausea
- Only rarely associated with fever, as it is non-invasive
- More likely to be hypothermic from severe dehydration
Severe Cholera (Cholera Gravis)
- Severe, life threatening dehydration occurs in 10-20%
- Profuse diarrhea, leading to shock from profound fluid losses, and, eventually, death
- Up to 1 L of diarrhea per day, with death occurring in as little as one day
- Signs are those of severe dehydration:
- Lethargy or loss of consciousness
- Sunken eyes
- Low skin turgor
- Low blood pressure and weak pulse
- Unable to drink
- Can see significant electrolyte abnormalities due to the secretory diarrhea
Cholera Sicca
- Fluid builds up in abdomen and can cause dehydration and death even without significant bowel movements
Asymptomatic Carriage
- Colonized patients are asymptomatic but still infectious
- Among those who are symptomatic, they can shed it for months after illness (though most stop 2-3 days after symptom resolution)
Differential Diagnosis
- Refer to diarrhea in the returned traveller
Diagnosis
- Usually clinical diagnosis in low-resource settings
- Essentially all patients 5 years of age and older who present with acute watery diarrhea causing severe dehydration
- Stool culture
- Helpful for determining resistance during outbreaks, but not routinely done
- Rapid stool tests, requiring dark field microscopy to see "shooting star" appearance of vibrios
- Serology, sometimes, with a sensitivity and specificity anywhere from 60 and 100%
- PCR also exists
Management
- Isolation
- Rehydration is the main way to reduce mortality
- Mild: alert with normal exam
- Oral rehydration at home, guided by thirst
- Should be observed until they are reliably replacing their losses, then can be discharged home
- Moderate: alert to restless, with some abnormalities on exam to suggest dehydration
- Oral or IV rehydration in hospital
- Bolus 75 mL/kg over 3-4 hours
- Replace losses
- Observe until signs of dehydration resolves and patient peeing
- Severe: cholera gravis, as described above
- Aggressive IV rehydration in hospital
- Bolus >100 mL/kg as rapidly as possible until circulation is restored, then the remainder over 3 hours
- Replace losses
- Mild: alert with normal exam
- Replace electrolytes as needed, but laboratory assistance is not required in most cases
- Antibiotics decrease duration and volume of diarrhea, and are indicated in cases of moderate or severe cholera
- Doxycycline 300 mg po once, avoided in pregnant women and children <8 years
- Azithromycin 1 g po once
- Ciprofloxacin used previously, but increasing resistance
- Avoid antiemetics and antimotility agents
- Consider zinc supplementation in children 10-30 mg daily x5-7 days
- Can use a cholera cot
Rehydration Fluids
- D5/lactated Ringer's (D5LR) is the preferred IV fluid, though D5-NS can be used if D5LR is not available
- "Dhaka solution" has more potassium, bicarbonate, and glucose, and is optimal
- NS can be used for circulatory support
- Oral rehydration solution (ORS) has salt and glucose
- In an emergency, can add 1/2 tsp salt with 6 tsp sugar in 1 L of clean water
Prevention
- Improved water hygiene and sanitation is the backbone of long-term prevention, but is expensive and slow to set up
Infection Prevention and Control
- Routine precautions
- Needs contact precaution if:
- Pediatric patient
- Incontinent
- Stool not contained
- Poor hygiene
- Patient is contaminating the environment
- Continue until 48 hours after symptoms have resolved
Immunization
- All vaccines in use are based on killed Vibrio cholerae
- Dukoral is killed whole-cell serotype O1, classic and El Tor biotypes, with additional recombinant cholera toxin subunit B (CtxB)
- Shanchol (India) is bivalent, including a number of O1 strains as well as O139, without the addition of CtxB
- Euvichol (South Korea) similar to Shanchol
- mORCVAX (Vietnam) is similar to Shanchol, but only available locally in Vietnam
- For children, Dukoral is approved for people aged 2 years and older while the others are for ages 1 and older
- Dukoral needs boosters every 2 years (or every 6 months for children younger than 5 years)
- All vaccines are well-tolerated but only 60-80% effective within 6 months (Dukoral) to 5 years (Shanchol and Euvichol)
- During outbreaks, they have about 80% effectiveness and vaccine rates of at least 50% are needed to interrupt transmission
Further Reading
- Cholera Outbreak Training and Shigellosis (COTS) Program: information and tools for managing cholera