Introduction

Listeria monocytogenes is a ubiquitous motile facultative anaerobic Gram-positive bacillus (bacterial species) with the ability to persist under adverse conditions [1]. Generally, the disease caused by this agent (listeriosis) in adults selectively affects pregnant women, patients at extreme ages or patients with various types of immunosuppression [2]. Ingestion of contaminated food is the most common source of infection, which usually has a limited course in immunocompetent patients. However, listeriosis may present in an invasive life-threatening form in high-risk groups, with high mortality rates [2]. Invasive disease usually presents as meningitis, meningoencephalitis or primary bacteraemia that can lead to sepsis. Most studies tend to separate severe listeriosis into two groups based on clinical presentation: bacteraemic clinical course (e.g. bacteraemia or sepsis) and neurolisteriosis (e.g. meningitis, meningoencephalitis or rhombencephalitis [3].

In the United States, high hospitalisation and mortality rates due to listeriosis have been reported [3,4,5,6]. In Europe, listeriosis is one of the most serious foodborne infections [7]. The incidence of this disease has gradually increased in Europe in recent years, with the exception of 2020, probably due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Spain, together with France and Poland, are the countries reporting the highest number of cases requiring hospitalisation [8]. According to hospital data, listeriosis has been on an upward trend in Spain since 1997 [9].

Several factors associated with severe forms (i.e. those requiring hospitalisation or causing death) of listeriosis have been suggested, including severe immunosuppression, concomitant presence of serious conditions (e.g. cancer), seasonality and low neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio [10]. However, to date, factors associated with early mortality after resolution of active infection remain unknown.

Our hypothesis is that listeriosis is a marker for a group of patients with particular vulnerability, whose short-term prognostic outcomes are poor, and who can be identified to improve follow-up prevention.

The aim of this study was to analyse (1) factors associated with in-hospital mortality due to listeriosis and (2) factors associated with early mortality after resolution of infection, in a cohort of confirmed cases in Granada, Spain.

Methods

The Strengthening the Results of Observational studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) guideline [11] was followed for the presentation of the results of this study, in accordance with the recommendations of the EQUATOR guidelines.

Study design and setting

We conducted a longitudinal observational cohort study using a retrospective case series that compiled all cases of listeriosis notified in the province of Granada, Spain, through the electronic application (RedAlerta) of the Andalusian Epidemiological Surveillance System (the first notified cases of listeriosis in Granada started in 2005) to 2021. Only confirmed cases (i.e. those with a confirmatory laboratory test identifying L. monocytogenes in a clinical sample) were included. All cases were followed up retrospectively until December 31, 2021.

Data sources and variables

The main sources of data for this study were the Andalusian Epidemiological Surveillance System, which allowed the identification of all notified cases of listeriosis, and the electronic medical records of the cases selected. Hospitalisation reports of cases that required hospital admission were accessed, and the primary care medical records were consulted to collect relevant sociodemographic and clinical information. The main variables considered in this study were:

  • Sociodemographic variables: age, sex, and year of diagnosis.

  • Epidemiological and environmental variables: hospital or primary care centre.

  • Dates: date of case report, date of onset of symptoms, date of admission, date of discharge, date of death.

  • Previous comorbidities, immunosuppression (we considered in this group those patients that showed immunosuppression in blood tests, or those under immunosuppressing treatments), and pregnancy.

  • Clinical presentation of the disease: meningitis, meningoencephalitis, rhombencephalitis, bacteraemia (defined as the identification of L. monocytogenes in blood tests without associated septic syndrome), sepsis (which included septic syndrome or septic shock), gastroenteritis, device-associated infection, or others.

  • Follow-up variables: cause of death after resolution of active infection (cancer disease, infection or other causes).

The main outcomes considered were (1) in-hospital death during active infection (2) death during the first year after resolution of active infection, and (3) death during the first 5 years after resolution of active infection.

Statistical analyses

First, a descriptive analysis was performed to characterise the entire sample. Absolute frequency (n) and relative frequency (%) were used to describe qualitative variables and mean (x) and standard deviation (sd) to describe quantitative variables. This analysis was stratified by in-hospital mortality and bivariate analyses were applied to identify risk factors for mortality during hospitalisation. For possible quantitative risk factors, Student's t tests were applied, and for qualitative risk factors, chi-square tests were applied. Next, we focussed on the sample of patients who survived acute infection. This subgroup was evaluated and stratified by the development of our main outcomes of interest, namely 1-year and 5-year mortality after resolution of infection. To identify the main variables associated with mortality after resolution, bivariate analyses were performed. Once the potential risk factors were identified by bivariate analysis, a multivariate analysis was performed. For this purpose, we designed logistic regression models using our three outcomes of interest as dependent variables. Covariates included sex, age, previous comorbidities, year of diagnosis, and clinical presentation of listeriosis. Finally, survival analyses were conducted using the time after clinical recovery of acute listeriosis and were graphically assessed using Kaplan–Meier estimates. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards models were designed. Adjusted hazard ratios were calculated. The conditions of application for Cox regression models were verified and validation of the final models was assessed. Foe each variable, we used Schoenfield residuals to verify the proportionality of hazards. Covariates included the relevant sociodemographic and clinical variables detected in bivariate analyses as potential confounders.

All analyses were performed using the free software R (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria; https://www.R-project.org/).

Ethical considerations

Our study complied with all ethical standards for observational studies in humans and the recommendations stated in the Declaration of Helsinki. We used an anonymized database for all analyses, and all potentially identifying variables were removed. Our study was approved by the Provincial Ethics Committee of Granada (code EML_040222).

Results

The sample of our study consisted of 206 adult patients with confirmed diagnosis of listeriosis in the province of Granada from 2005 to 2021. Figure 1 shows the flow diagram describing how the sample was obtained.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Flow chart of the selection of the sample

A total of 190 patients (92.2%) required hospital admission due to listeriosis, 56 (29.5%) required admission to the intensive care unit, and 42 (20.4%) died during hospitalisation. Table 1 shows the main sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of the adult sample, stratified by in-hospital mortality.

Table 1 Main characteristics of adult listeriosis cases stratified by in-hospital mortality

The mean age of patients with listeriosis was 62.6 years (standard deviation 18.8), with 60.2% of them being men. A total of 88.3% of the infected patients had some relevant comorbidity. The most frequent comorbidities were hypertension (37.4%), diabetes mellitus (26.7%), cancer (23.3%), immunosuppression (15.5%) and chronic kidney disease (14.1%). Regarding the clinical presentation of listeriosis, the most frequent were meningitis (30.6%), bacteraemia (25.7%), meningoencephalitis (12.6%), sepsis (11.7%), rhombencephalitis (9.8%), gastroenteritis (4.9%) and device-associated infection (2.9%). Therefore, bacteraemic (whether bacteraemia or sepsis), neurolisteriosis and gastroenteritis were the most frequent clinical manifestations (Fig. 2).

Fig. 2
figure 2

Most frequent clinical manifestations of listeriosis. A Blood dissemination of L. monocytogenes inside the macrophages. B Neurolisteriosis. The arrows show the ring-enhancing lesions affecting the encephalon and rhombencephalon. C Gastroenteritis. The bacteria affect intracellularly and provoke the release of cytokines intro the intestinal lumen

The main factors associated with in-hospital mortality in bivariate analyses were advanced age (p < 0.001), especially in patients > 80 years (p = 0.020), and the presence

of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (p = 0.041), chronic kidney disease (p = 0.011), heart failure (p = 0.010), cancer (p = 0.033), metastasis (p = 0.042) and, sepsis as a clinical form of listeriosis (p = 0.010). These variables confirmed the profile of the patient most vulnerable to in-hospital death after admission for listeriosis. The absence of comorbidities (p = 0.036) acted as a protective factor, and there was a non-significant trend towards higher mortality in men.

Patients who survived hospitalisation (n = 164) were followed up to detect early mortality at 1 and 5 years, respectively. Table 2 shows the main characteristics of the sample of adult survivors stratified by early mortality after discharge. Twenty-six (15.9%) patients died during the year following recovery from acute infection, and no relapse of listeriosis was observed. The main factors associated with 1-year early mortality were age (p = 0.007), diabetes mellitus (p = 0.033), cancer (p < 0.001) and metastasis (p < 0.001). Forty-seven (28.7%) patients died during the 5 years after recovery from listeriosis. Factors associated with 5-year mortality were age (p < 0.001), diabetes mellitus (p = 0.002), chronic kidney disease (p = 0.034), liver disease (p = 0.050), cancer (p < 0.001), metastasis (p < 0.001) or chemotherapeutic treatment (p < 0.021), and bacteraemia as clinical presentation of listeriosis (p = 0.013). The absence of comorbidities (p = 0.022) and pregnancy at presentation (p = 0.021) acted as protective factors for this outcome. Table 3 compares the 1-year mortality of patients after recovery from severe listeriosis with the 1-year mortality of the general population of Andalusia, according to the Spanish National Institute of Statistics (https://ine.es/). This table shows that our sub-population presents mortality rates more than ten times higher than in the general population for all age sub-groups.

Table 2 Main characteristics of the patients who recovered from acute infection (n = 164) stratified by 1-year and 5-year early mortality
Table 3 One-year early mortality after resolution of listeriosis and annual mortality rate in Andalusia according to the most recent data (National Institute of Statistics, Spain, 2020)

Of the 47 patients who died within 5 years after recovery from infection, the causes were cancer in 22 (46.8%) cases, infection in 16 (34.0%) cases, and sequelae of listeriosis (i.e. neurolisteriosis) in 3 (6.4%) cases. Table 3 shows the results of the multivariate analysis performed for the 3 outcomes of interest.

Regarding survival analysis, Fig. 3 shows the Kaplan–Meier estimates for the outcome death after recovery from listeriosis of the 164 patients that survived the acute infection. The median follow-up was 3 years (1,098 days). The median survival time (50% of deaths of the followed cohort) was reached at 11.3 (4,141 days) years of follow-up. Table 4 shows the results from multivariate Cox regression models. The factors that showed association with the time to death were age (HR: 1.03; 95% CI 1.02–1.07), diabetes mellitus (HR 1.86, 95% CI 1.01–3.44), chronic kidney disease (HR 3.96, 95% CI 1.87–8.38), liver disease (HR 3.62, 95% CI 1.64–8.51), cancer (HR 3.76, 95% CI 1.90–7.46), metastases (HR 12.88, 95%CI 3.61–45.90), after adjusting for all collected sociodemographic and clinical potential confounders. No association was found regarding the other comorbidities or the different clinical manifestations of listeriosis. Figure 4 summarises the main findings of this study.

Fig. 3
figure 3

Kaplan–Meier survival estimates for the outcome death after recovery from acute listeriosis

Table 4 Multivariate analysis. Factors associated with in-hospital mortality, 1-year, and 5-year early mortality after resolution of listeriosis
Fig. 4
figure 4

Main findings of the study

Discussion

This longitudinal observational study of all reported cases of listeriosis in the province of Granada for 17 years shows a high in-hospital mortality (20.4%) and, more importantly, a high early mortality after recovery, reaching 15.9% 1 year after recovery from infection and 28.7% during the following 5 years. These data suggest that listeriosis could be a marker of early mortality. Furthermore, in our sample, we observed that adult patients who develop severe listeriosis tend to have a high frequency of comorbidities, especially cancer, immunosuppression, and chronic disorders, such as diabetes mellitus or hypertension, as well as advanced age. These data underline the special frailty of these patients and help to explain the early mortality observed. Finally, our study helps to identify the main factors associated with a fatal prognosis in adult patients with listeriosis, mainly advanced age, diabetes mellitus, chronic kidney disease, liver disease and cancer.

As previously described in the scientific literature, listeriosis is an opportunistic disease whose infection mainly targets vulnerable risk groups [12]. Thus, excluding vertical transmission to neonates, listeriosis particularly affects cancer patients, immunosuppressed patients, pregnant women and elderly patients [2]. These data fully coincide with the sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of our sample, in which only 11.7% showed no comorbidities according to their medical history.

Regarding in-hospital mortality, our data showed lower figures than those reported by Charlier et al. in France [3], who found 40% in-hospital mortality in cases of bacteraemia (including bacteraemia or sepsis) and 27% in cases of neurolisteriosis (including meningitis, meningoencephalitis or rhombencephalitis), compared to 25% and 20% in our cohort, respectively. Our data are similar to those reported by Thønnings et al. in Denmark [13], who found 23% mortality in cases of sepsis and 25% in cases of meningitis. In our study, sepsis was shown to be the main clinical form of listeriosis associated with in-hospital mortality. Interestingly, neurolisteriosis was not a worse prognostic risk factor per se in our sample, which contrasts with existing knowledge. Pregnant women in our cohort showed a lower risk of mortality in comparison with the rest of clinical manifestations recorded in our study. This might be partially explained by the younger age of this sub-population and the lower frequency of relevant comorbidities. The main associated comorbidities were advanced age, heart failure, renal disease, and metastasis. Although cancer and comorbidities have been noted as risk factors for in-hospital mortality elsewhere [3], the specific comorbidities that increase this risk are still unknown. Their detection could help to identify patients with listeriosis at higher risk on admission. In turn, this would help design preventive strategies aimed at improving their prognosis. In our study, we did not observe significant differences in mortality due to listeriosis over time (from 2005 to 2021), although there was a trend towards a reduction in these figures in more recent years. This trend might be partially explained by the significant improvement of the institutions involved in the study in terms of intensive care and hospitalisation resources in recent years. Finally, we also observed a higher frequency of in-hospital death in men.

Concerning early mortality after recovery from acute infection, the high percentage of patients who died during the year following recovery was striking, almost one in six. The 1-year death rate of our sample was strikingly higher than mortality rates of Andalusian general population for all age groups, although no data on patients with similar comorbidities were available to compare. These data suggest that listeriosis could be a clinical manifestation of more serious processes. It is evident that early mortality is higher in patients diagnosed with cancer, especially at metastatic stages. The association between listeriosis and cancer severity has already been reported in previous studies [14]. Nevertheless, in our study, we have also found an association with advanced age and liver disease (mainly previous diagnosis of chronic viral hepatitis). Our findings could suggest that it is necessary to intensify the immediate follow-up of elderly patients with previous liver conditions after recovery from listeriosis. In this same vein, follow-up consultations in primary care could help to early identify those patients at higher risk and their alarm symptoms, as has been done during the pandemic regarding the most severe cases of COVID-19 [15, 16]. Finally, the high percentage of patients whose cause of death was another infection was striking. These data reinforce that, preventive strategies, whether vaccines, pharmacological or lifestyle-related, aimed at strengthening the immune system, and improving access to health system (given that the early antibiotic treatment influences the prognosis of listeriosis), could help to improve the figures observed in our study.

Five years after recovery, the percentage of deaths increased to almost one in three patients. Although listeriosis particularly affects patients of advanced age and with previous conditions, in our opinion, this does not justify such a high early mortality as observed. Again, advanced age and the presence of cancer and metastases showed a very strong association in the adjusted models. In addition, previous liver disease (which proved to be one of the main indicators of mortality in our study) and bacteraemia as clinical presentation were associated with this outcome. When L. monocytogenes is able to reach the bloodstream, it is because it has overcome the natural immunological barriers of its host [17] and, therefore, this could be a marker of immunological weakness. Additionally, neurolisteriosis usually shows more identifiable clinical manifestations that facilitate its diagnosis and early treatment compared with bacteraemia. Nevertheless, the group of patients with central nervous system involvement showed a higher frequency of sequelae or persistent symptoms. This could be explained by factors, such as differential follow-up bias (i.e. these patients were systematically scheduled for follow-up programmes by the service of Neurology) or irreversible damage to specific functions of the central nervous system. In any case, no clinical manifestation showed association with mortality in Cox regression models.

Finally, given that follow-up period was different for each patient (e.g. patients followed from 2007 had more probability of developing the outcome than those followed since 2021), the multivariate Cox regression models helped to identify factors associated with time to death after recovery from acute listeriosis. Those factors independently associated with worse prognosis were age, diabetes mellitus, chronic kidney disease, liver disease and cancer, therefore conforming the most vulnerable group of patients after discharge. No specific clinical manifestation of listeriosis was identified as prognostic factor in our survival analyses.

The main strengths of our study lie in its multicentre nature (it included hospitals and notification centres across the province of Granada, through the Andalusian Epidemiological Surveillance System assessed within the Provincial Health Delegation of Granada), in the long period during which the registry was available (from 2005, the date of the first notified cases of listeriosis), and in the possibility to access medical records and collect detailed and reliable clinical information. However, although our data showed high early mortality after severe listeriosis, it is not possible to conclude that listeriosis itself is a marker of early mortality. For this assertion to be true, it would be necessary to compare these patients with a control group with similar characteristics in terms of vulnerability (age and presence of comorbidities); conversely, it can be concluded that listeriosis is strongly associated with poor health conditions that frequently lead to a fatal prognosis and, thus, improved follow-up and identification of potentially severe cases could be useful. To help design effective preventive strategies, future studies should analyse potential differences in the prognosis of patients with listeriosis compared to patients without listeriosis but with similar comorbidities. Another perceived limitation of our study was the inclusion of cases notified through our epidemiological system. It is known that the most frequent clinical manifestation of listeriosis is gastroenteritis, generally in the context of foodborne outbreaks [2]. However, most of these clinical infections go unnoticed and are not diagnosed by laboratory tests, making it impossible to identify them as confirmed cases and to notify them. Therefore, our selection of notified cases implies that our sample included the most severe cases of listeriosis, most of which correspond to those requiring hospitalisation (meningitis, sepsis, etc.). We did not include the time and type of antibiotic treatment during Emergency management of patients, as this information was poorly registered in the medical records before 2010. However, this information may constitute an important prognostic factor to consider in multivariate analyses. We tried to partially overcome this bias by adjusting for year of treatment and clinical presentation, assuming that antibiotic treatment was similar for these sub-groups of patients. Finally, it should be noted that, despite gathering all the data for a province and a period of more than 15 years, the sample size of our study is not large enough to obtain precise conclusions. Accordingly, the confidence intervals obtained from multivariate analyses are very wide and only in few cases allowed us to detect relevant differences. Therefore, our results should be interpreted cautiously. Nevertheless, we believe that the identification of associations through bivariate and even multivariate analysis, despite the aforementioned limitations, allowed us to make an interesting approach to potential factors involved in this early mortality after listeriosis.

In any case, our results should help to design prevention and public health strategies to improve the prognosis of patients with severe listeriosis after its resolution, as well as to improve follow-up consultations in neurology, infectious diseases, and primary care. Future studies in other settings are warranted to corroborate our results.

Conclusion

Listeriosis is an infection that predominantly affects elderly, immunocompromised individuals, and patients with high-risk health conditions, such as cancer, chronic diseases, or pregnancy. In-hospital mortality due to this infection was very high in our cohort and was mainly associated with older age and with the presence of heart failure, metastatic cancer, and sepsis as clinical manifestation. In addition, our study highlights the high early mortality that occurs after resolution of the infection. Particularly, advanced age, the presence of cancer, previous liver disease, diabetes mellitus, and chronic kidney disease acted as risk factors for early mortality after recovery from acute listeriosis. It is necessary to increase knowledge about these risk factors to improve the prognosis of listeriosis after resolution of infection and to optimise individualised follow-up strategies.