%0 Journal Article %T Mycobacterium genavense as a cause of subacute pneumonia in patients with severe cellular immunodeficiency %A Blandine Rammaert %A Louis-Jean Couderc %A Elisabeth Rivaud %A Patrick Honderlick %A David Zucman %A Marie-France Mamzer %A Pierre Cahen %A Emmanuel Bille %A Marc Lecuit %A Olivier Lortholary %A Emilie Catherinot %J BMC Infectious Diseases %D 2011 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2334-11-311 %X We report here two patients with pneumonia as the predominant manifestation of M. genavense infection: one kidney transplanted patient and one HIV-infected patient. Both patients were initially treated with anti-tuberculous drugs before the identification of M. genavense on sputum or broncho-alveolar lavage fluid culture. A four-drug regimen including clarithromycin and rifabutin was started. Gamma interferon has been helpful in addition to antimycobacterial treatment for one patient.Clinicians should be aware that M. genavense could be the etiologic agent of sub-acute pneumonia mimicking tuberculosis in patients with cellular immunodeficiency status.Host defenses against mycobacteria need an immune cellular response (Th1/Th17) activated by cytokines and chemokines produced by innate immunity cells [1]. Consequently, non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) could cause life threatening infection in immunocompromised patients with profound cellular immune deficiency in particular those who are HIV-infected [2]. M. genavense, is a fastidious growing mycobacteria found in water [3] with birds and pets being occasionally infected [4]. Human infections were initially described in HIV-infected patients [5]. Thereafter, few cases have been observed in non-HIV immunocompromised hosts including only two reports in solid organ transplant recipients [6,7]. M. genavense infection preferentially involves bowel and abdominal lymph nodes, a fact being ascribed to the presumed digestive contamination. Mortality of patients with disseminated M. genavense infection is high, ranging from 44% to 71% in 2 series [8,9]. Herein we report two cases of M. genavense infected patients with pulmonary involvement as the main clinical manifestation, one kidney transplant recipient and one HIV-infected patient.A 43-year-old woman, of Moroccan origin, was admitted in August 2005 for seizure, an 8 kg loss of body-weight, slowly increasing dyspnea, productive cough, and fever lasting for 4 months. She had %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2334/11/311