PEDIATRICS Vol. 111 No. 6 June 2003, pp. 1442-1446
EXPERIENCE AND REASON
Transmission of Salmonella enterica
Serotype Typhimurium DT104 to Infants Through Mothers Breast Milk
Salah S. Qutaishat, PhD, Mary E. Stemper, MS,
Susan K. Spencer, BS, Mark A. Borchardt, PhD,
James C. Opitz, MD, Timothy A. Monson, MS, Jennifer L.
Anderson, BS and Jay L. E. Ellingson, PhD
Saint Josephs Hospital, Marshfield, WI 54449
Marshfield Laboratories, Marshfield Clinic, Marshfield, WI 54449
Marshfield Medical Research Foundation, Marshfield, WI 54449
Department of Pediatrics, Marshfield Clinic, Marshfield, WI 54449
Communicable Disease Division, Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene, Madison,
WI 53706
Food Safety Services, Marshfield Clinic, Marshfield, WI 54449
This study documents the first reported transmission of
Salmonellaenterica serotype Typhimurium definitive type 104
(DT104) topremature fraternal twins via their mothers breast milk.When premature twin neonates developed severe enteritis in the
neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), stool samples and the mothers
breast milk were cultured for the presence of Salmonella. Antibacterialsusceptibility patterns were determined. Semiquantitative organismabundance data were retrospectively gathered on 54 stored breastmilk samples collected on 34 different days using a rapid, real-timepolymerase chain reaction (PCR) methodology (LightCycler PCR).
Fecal samples from other infants in the NICU at that time werealso
tested. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) was usedto assess
the genetic composition of the isolated organisms.The twins
neonatal stools and mothers breast milkcultures revealed a
resistance pattern (R-type) to ampicillin,chloramphenicol,
streptomycin, sulfonamides, and tetracycline.LightCycler PCR
analysis of sequential breast milk samples confirmedthis to be the
likely source of transmission. In the subsequentoutbreak
investigation, none of the NICU surveillance fecalsamples proved
positive for this organism. The genetic compositionof organisms
isolated from the maternal breast milk was indistinguishablefrom
those isolated from neonatal specimens as determined byPFGE.
Antibiotic susceptibility tests coupled with PFGE patternssuggested
that these Salmonella isolates were DT104. Becausethe
prevalence of DT104 infections is rising in the United States,
neonatologists should be aware of breast milk as a potentialmode of
transmission.
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