The role of leech water sampling in choice of prophylactic antibiotics in medical leech therapy
Microbiology surveillance published in Microsurgery (2013)
Abstract
Medical leech therapy (MLT) with Hirudo medicinalis is well established as a treatment for venous congestion of tissue flaps, grafts, and replants. Unfortunately, this treatment is associated with surgical site infections with bacterial species, most commonly Aeromonas hydrophila, which is an obligate symbiot of H. medicinalis. For this reason, prophylactic antibiotics are recommended in the setting of MLT. After culturing Aeromonashydrophila resistant to ciprofloxacin from a tissue specimen from a patient with a failed replant of three digits post-MLT, we performed environmental surveillance cultures and antibiotic susceptibility testing on water collected from leech tanks. This surveillance was performed twice weekly for 2.5 months. Fourteen surveillance cultures demonstrated 21 isolates of Aeromonas species, 71.4% of which were ciprofloxacin susceptible. All isolates were sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim (SXT) susceptible. The prophylactic antibiotic regimen of choice for leech therapy at our institution is SXT, with culture of tank water to refine antimicrobial choice if necessary. This study demonstrates the importance of regular surveillance to detect resistant Aeromonas species in medical leeches; however optimal practice has not been established.
Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.
Summary
Twice-weekly environmental surveillance over 2.5 months yielded 21 Aeromonas isolates from leech tank water; 71.4% were ciprofloxacin-susceptible while 100% were trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole-susceptible — leading to SXT as institutional prophylaxis of choice.
Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy
Prompted by a ciprofloxacin-resistant Aeromonas hydrophila infection in a failed digit replant after leech therapy, this study performed twice-weekly surveillance cultures of leech-tank water over 2.5 months, yielding 21 Aeromonas isolates of which 71.4% were ciprofloxacin-susceptible while all were susceptible to sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim, leading the institution to adopt SXT prophylaxis with tank-water culture to refine the choice. It speaks directly to the safety side of hirudotherapy, suggesting that environmental monitoring of leech water can guide antibiotic selection because resistant Aeromonas can circulate in the leech supply. As a single-institution surveillance study built around one index case, its resistance percentages are local and time-limited, and the authors themselves state that optimal prophylactic practice has not been established.
Citation
The role of leech water sampling in choice of prophylactic antibiotics in medical leech therapy.
Wilmer A et al. · Microsurgery, 2013
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