“…In humans, it is increasingly recognized as a cause of infant meningitis and bacteremia [9,10,11,12], and 58.7% of mortality rate has been observed with one-year neonates relating to this subspecies [13]. In adults, it is linked to a wide spectrum of diseases, including meningitis [14], endocarditis [15,16,17], splenic abscess [18], biliary and urinary tract infection [15,19,20,21], as well as gastric, pancreatic, hepatobiliary and colorectal cancers [16,22]. Death cases in adults were also reported in association with infections by this subspecies.…”