| Literature DB >> 29312894 |
Ka Lip Chew1, Raymond T P Lin1,2, Jeanette W P Teo1.
Abstract
Klebsiella pneumoniae remains a major pathogen responsible for localized infections such as cystitis and pneumonia, and disseminated infections that may result in severe sepsis and death. Invasive disease such as liver abscesses and endogenous endophthalmitis are associated with capsular serotypes K1 and K2. These infections require a prolonged course of antimicrobial treatment which has evolved over the years from inpatient treatment to outpatient parenteral antibiotic therapy. The emergence of plasmid-mediated resistance began with extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs) and AmpC β-lactamases. This was followed by carbapenemase genes and now plasmid transmissible colistin resistance (mcr), thus limiting viable treatment options. Plasmid-mediated carbapenemase production in Singapore was first reported in 1996. Carbapenemase production has since become the predominant mechanism of carbapenem resistance and incidence rates continue to increase over time. Although carbapenemases can occur in all Enterobacteriaceae, K. pneumoniae are the most common carrier of carbapenemase genes. Alternative treatment options are urgently required before the simplest infections, let alone invasive infections are left potentially untreatable. Clinical management requires guidance from robust laboratory testing methods to optimize patient outcomes. We explore past and present trends in treatment of K. pneumoniae infections, and discuss future treatment options and gaps in knowledge for further study.Entities:
Keywords: Enterobacteriaceae; antibiotic prophylaxis; hypervirulent Klebsiella pneumoniae (hvKP); metastasis; resistance mechanisms
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29312894 PMCID: PMC5732907 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2017.00515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Clinical reports of Klebsiella pneumoniae infections in Singapore.
| 1994 | Patients with | 101 | 26 | Source of bacteraemia unknown (33%), Liver abscess (17%), UTI (29%) | Lee et al., |
| 2008 | Patients with | 133 | 20.3 | HBS 38.3% including liver abscess in 18.0%, Pneumonia (13.3%), UTI (28.1%), Unknown source (14.8%), Others (5.5%) | Sng et al., |
| 2015 | Patients with | 134 | 23.1 | HBS 36.3%, including liver abscess in 14.2%, Respiratory 20.1%, | Ng et al., |
| 2017 | Patients with | 129 | 25.6 | HBS 34.1% including liver abscess in 16.3%, Pneumonia 18.6%, Pyelonephritis 11.6%, Cystitis 16.3%, Other intraabdominal source 8.5%, Meningitis 0.8%, Others 3.9%, Unknown 6.2% | Tan et al., |
| 1996 | Patients with CAP admitted to ICU | 9/61 (15%) | N/A | Lee et al., | |
| 1998 | Patients with CAP admitted to ICU | 5/57 (9%) | 3/5 (60%) | Tan et al., | |
| 1999 | Patients with HAP admitted to ICU | 6/24 (25%) | N/A | Stebbings et al., | |
| 2010 | ICU patients with UTI acquired during ICU admission | 3/35 (8.6%) | N/A | Tay et al., | |
| 2011 | Community clinic patients with UTI | 29/333 (8.7%) | N/A | Bahadin et al., | |
| 2005 | Review of patients with liver abscess, comparing PD vs SD | 51/80 (63.8%) | Overall: 3/80 (3.8%), PD: 1/36 (2.8%), SD: 2/44 (4.5%) | Tan et al., | |
| 2013 | Review of patients with | 109/205 (53%) | 0% | Chan et al., | |
| 2015 | Adults with pyogenic liver abscess | 292/741 (39%) of positive fluid cultures | N/A | Zhi et al., | |
| 2002 | Reviewed cases of meningitis/ | 2/269 (0.7%) of clinical cases | N/A | Only 15 cases were culture positive. The breakdown of positive cultures are as follows: 4 | Chan et al., |
| 2000 | Reviewed cases of endogenous bacterial endopthalmitis | 16/27 (59.3%) | N/A | 11 of 16 (68.8%) | Wong et al., |
| 2011 | Consecutive | 61 patients (71 eyes) | N/A | 47/61 (77.5%) were associated with liver abscess | Ang et al., |
CAP, Community-acquired pneumonia; ICU, Intensive care unit; HAP, Hospital-acquired pneumonia; UTI, Urinary tract infection; HBS, Hepatobiliary sepsis; OPAT, Outpatient parenteral antibiotic therapy; PD, Percutaneous drainage; SD, Surgical drainage; VA, Visual acuity.
One patient with Kp had multiple organisms cultured.