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Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma Donor-Derived Infection and Hyperammonemia Syndrome in 4 Solid Organ Transplant Recipients From a Single Donor.

Charlotte WigstonMelanie LavenderRebecca LongDipen SankhesaraDavid ChingGraham Weaire-BuchananShakeel MowlaboccusGeoffrey W CoombsKaitlyn LamJeremy WrobelMeow Cheong YawMichael MuskPeter A Boan
Published in: Open forum infectious diseases (2023)
Hyperammonemia syndrome (HS) is a life-threatening condition occurring in solid organ transplant patients, affecting primarily lung recipients, and is associated with Mycoplasma hominis and/or Ureaplasma spp infection. The organ donor was a young man who died of hypoxic brain injury and had urethral discharge antemortem. The donor and 4 solid organ transplant recipients had infection with M hominis and/or Ureaplasma spp. The lung and heart recipients both developed altered conscious state and HS associated with M hominis and Ureaplasma spp infections. Despite treatment with antibiotics and ammonia scavengers, both the lung and heart recipients died at day +102 and day +254, respectively. After diagnosis in the thoracic recipients, screening samples from the liver recipient and 1 kidney recipient were culture positive for M hominis with or without Ureaplasma spp. Neither the liver nor kidney recipients developed HS. Our case series demonstrates the unique finding of M hominis and Ureaplasma spp dissemination from an immunocompetent donor across 4 different organ recipients. Phylogenetic whole genome sequencing analysis demonstrated that M hominis samples from recipients and donor were closely related, suggesting donor-derived infection. Screening of lung donors and/or recipients for Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma spp is recommended, as well as prompt treatment with antimicrobials to prevent morbidity.
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