Emergence of KPC-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae in Uruguay: Infection control and molecular characterization

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Abstract

We describe the first outbreak of Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase-producing K. pneumoniae (KPC-KP), the infection control measures adopted and the shift in resistance patterns of isolates during antibiotic treatment. The ST258 KPC-KP strain exhibited a multiresistant antibiotic phenotype including co-resistance to gentamycin, colistin and tigecycline intermediate susceptibility. Isolates before and after treatment had different behaviour concerning their antibiotic susceptibility and the population analysis profile study. A progressive increase in the aminoglycosides (acquiring amicacin resistance) and β-lactam MICs, and a decreased susceptibility to fosfomycin was observed throughout the administration of combined antimicrobial regimens including meropenem. A high meropenem resistance KPC-KP homogeneous population (MIC 256 Jg/mL), could arise from the meropenem heterogeneous low-level resistance KPC-KP population (MIC 8 Jg/mL), by the selective pressure of the prolonged meropenem therapy. The kpc gene was inserted in a Tn4401 isoform a, and no transconjugants were detected. The core measures adopted were successful to prevent evolution towards resistance dissemination.

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Marquez, C., Ingold, A., Echeverría, N., Acevedo, A., Vignoli, R., García-Fulgueiras, V., … Galiana, A. (2014). Emergence of KPC-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae in Uruguay: Infection control and molecular characterization. New Microbes and New Infections, 2(3), 58–63. https://doi.org/10.1002/nmi2.40

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