Invasive Group A streptococcal (iGAS) infections are life-threatening conditions classically manifesting as necrotizing fasciitis or severe pneumonia, but their simultaneous occurrence in a previously healthy adult is extremely rare. While necrotizing fasciitis typically mandates urgent surgery, this report highlights a case of concurrent cervical necrotizing fasciitis-spectrum disease and pneumonia successfully managed through a conservative, non-surgical approach. A 29-year-old previously healthy Japanese male presented with a two-day history of fever, sore throat, and a maculopapular rash, with a throat swab positive for GAS. On Day 2, he acutely developed progressive dyspnea, hypoxemia, and extensive cervical subcutaneous emphysema. Computed tomography confirmed diffuse fascial edema and bilateral pulmonary infiltrates without signs of gas-forming abscess or irreversible tissue necrosis. Despite early amoxicillin administration, blood cultures remained negative, suggesting toxin-mediated clinical deterioration. Based on the imaging findings and close clinical monitoring, a non-operative strategy was selected. This was achieved by immediate medical escalation to broad-spectrum antimicrobials, including clindamycin to suppress toxin production, alongside meropenem and high-dose penicillin G. The patient recovered fully without surgical intervention. This case highlights that iGAS can cause rapid, concurrent soft-tissue and pulmonary involvement even in healthy individuals. In select cases of necrotizing fasciitis-spectrum disease where irreversible tissue necrosis is absent on prompt imaging and close clinical monitoring is maintained, aggressive multi-drug medical escalation incorporating antitoxin therapy can lead to successful outcomes without the need for morbid surgical procedures.
Neun et al. (Thu,) studied this question.