Abstract

Introduction: Leptospirosis is a worldwide zoonotic disease, with variable severity and involvement of multiple organs. Severe leptospirosis is associated with high morbidity and mortality rates, which poses a great threat to human health. Due to the limitation of traditional clinical and laboratory diagnosis methods, pathogens for many infectious diseases, including leptospirosis, remain unknown. Recently, unbiased next generation sequencing (NGS) sheds light on the precise and rapid diagnosis of intractable infectious diseases, which is greatly beneficial to the prompt treatment and reliable prognosis. Case presentation: A 35 year old male got a fever with rapid hepato-renal-pulmonary involvement after his travel to Hunan province, China. The manifestations initiated with a jaundice-hemorrhage clinical type, and then followed by the combination of jaundice-hemorrhage and diffuse hemorrhage (PDH) clinical types, along with liver, heart, muscle and pancreas involvement. To identify the causative agent for the disease, blood sample was collected for serologicaltests, pathogen-specific PCR detection. Meanwhile, blood and sputum samples were used to do the nextgeneration sequencing, and the Leptospira interrogans serovar Copenhageni was detected and confirmed as the pathogenic agent. Based on the precise diagnosis, our patient recovered progressively with antimicrobials and supportive care. Conclusion: NGS played a critical role in the precise diagnosis of leptospirosis infection in this case. Corticosteroids combined with antibiotics treatments based on the diagnosis and clinical signs with suspicious pulmonary hemorrhage may decelerate the disease progression. The unbiased NGS would be further used in clinics for disease diagnosis especially for the uncertain and unknown pathogens.

Highlights

  • Leptospirosis is a worldwide zoonotic disease, with variable severity and involvement of multiple organs

  • Severe manifestations are characterized by jaundice, acute renal failure and hemorrhage, leading to high morbidity and mortality rates [2]

  • The most common form of severe leptospirosis is known as Weil's disease, characterized by jaundice, renal failure, and haemorrhage [3]

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Summary

Conclusion

The application of unbiased next-generation sequencing provided a clinically actionable fast diagnosis for Leptospira infection and even for the identification of species and serovars. For leptospirosis patients with presumed pulmonary hemorrhage, corticosteroids and antibiotics combined administration in the early course of the disease is highly recommended. Our success provides valuable insight of next-generation sequencing application in Leptospira infection, and other uncertain and unknown pathogens infection, so that prompt and effective clinical interventions would be prescribed. Written informed consent was obtained from the patient for publication of this case report and any accompanying images. A copy of the written consent is available for review by the Editor of this journal

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