Abstract
Over 3 years, during six 1-month periods of surveillance, 69 cases of Enterococcus faecium colonisation or infection were detected in a university hospital in eastern France. Thirty-two cases involved strains resistant to amoxycillin (crude incidence of 0.21/1000 patient-days). The risk of infection with E. faecium was higher if the patient was hospitalised in a haematology ward and/or treated with cephalosporins. Amoxycillin-resistant isolates (AmRE) were isolated from different wards and time periods, and none of the characteristics studied were associated significantly with amoxycillin resistance. Amoxycillin-sensitive and -resistant isolates were characterised by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Three epidemic patterns were identified which contained 87.5% (28/32) of the AmRE isolates, indicating that clonal spread was responsible, at least partially, for the high incidence of AmRE in this hospital. © 2004 Copyright by the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases.
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Thouverez, M., & Talon, D. (2004). Microbiological and epidemiological studies of Enterococcus faecium resistant to amoxycillin in a university hospital in eastern France. Clinical Microbiology and Infection, 10(5), 441–447. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-0691.2004.00849.x
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