| Literature DB >> 31211681 |
Maroya Spalding Walters, Julian E Grass, Sandra N Bulens, Emily B Hancock, Erin C Phipps, Daniel Muleta, Jackie Mounsey, Marion A Kainer, Cathleen Concannon, Ghinwa Dumyati, Chris Bower, Jesse Jacob, P Maureen Cassidy, Zintars Beldavs, Karissa Culbreath, Walter E Phillips, Dwight J Hardy, Roberto L Vargas, Margret Oethinger, Uzma Ansari, Richard Stanton, Valerie Albrecht, Alison Laufer Halpin, Maria Karlsson, J Kamile Rasheed, Alexander Kallen.
Abstract
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is intrinsically resistant to many antimicrobial drugs, making carbapenems crucial in clinical management. During July-October 2015 in the United States, we piloted laboratory-based surveillance for carbapenem-resistant P. aeruginosa (CRPA) at sentinel facilities in Georgia, New Mexico, Oregon, and Tennessee, and population-based surveillance in Monroe County, NY. An incident case was the first P. aeruginosa isolate resistant to antipseudomonal carbapenems from a patient in a 30-day period from any source except the nares, rectum or perirectal area, or feces. We found 294 incident cases among 274 patients. Cases were most commonly identified from respiratory sites (120/294; 40.8%) and urine (111/294; 37.8%); most (223/280; 79.6%) occurred in patients with healthcare facility inpatient stays in the prior year. Genes encoding carbapenemases were identified in 3 (2.3%) of 129 isolates tested. The burden of CRPA was high at facilities under surveillance, but carbapenemase-producing CRPA were rare.Entities:
Keywords: Pseudomonas aeruginosa; United States; antimicrobial resistance; carbapenem resistance; carbapenemase; multidrug-resistant
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31211681 PMCID: PMC6590762 DOI: 10.3201/eid2507.181200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Carbapenem-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates identified through Emerging Infections Program sites, United States, July–October 2015*
| Site | No. carbapenem-resistant | Total no. | % Carbapenem resistant | No. incident cases† |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Georgia | 68 | 566 | 12.0 | 49 |
| Tennessee | 91 | 890 | 10.2 | 79 |
| New Mexico | 116 | 1,295 | 9.0 | 85 |
| New York‡ | 83 | 932 | 8.9 | 60 |
| Oregon | 26 | 560 | 4.6 | 21 |
| Total | 384 | 4,243 | 9.1 | 294 |
*Isolates are P. aeruginosa isolated from any specimen source except nares, rectum, perirectal area, or feces; carbapenem-resistant P. aeruginosa are isolates resistant to >1 carbapenem with anti-pseudomonal activity (doripenem, imipenem, or meropenem). †Incident case defined as first carbapenem-resistant P. aeruginosa case in a patient in a 30-day period. ‡Cases in New York were identified through population-based surveillance; all other sites performed sentinel surveillance.
Carbapenem-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa patient demographics and clinical characteristics, United States, July–October 2015*
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| Patient demographics | N = 274 |
| Sex | |
| F | 114 (41.6) |
| M | 160 (58.4) |
| Median age, y (range) | 66 (<1–98) |
| Age group, y | |
| 0–18 | 9 (3.3) |
| 19–49 | 57 (20.8) |
| 50–64 | 67 (24.5) |
| 65–79 | 91 (33.2) |
|
| 50 (18.2) |
| White ethnicity | 181/226 (80.1) |
| Underlying clinical conditions† | N = 262 |
| None | 6 (2.3) |
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | 95 (36.3) |
| Diabetes | 90 (34.4) |
| Chronic renal insufficiency | 59 (22.5) |
| Decubitus ulcer | 55 (21.0) |
| Congestive heart failure | 51 (19.5) |
| Neurologic problems | 49 (18.7) |
| Urinary tract problems/abnormalities | 49 (18.7) |
| Obesity | 44 (16.8) |
| Stroke | 40 (15.3) |
| Dementia | 37 (14.1) |
| Hemiplegia/paraplegia | 35 (13.4) |
| Chronic skin breakdown | 29 (11.1) |
| Prolonged surgical wound | 15 (51.7) |
| Burn | 1 (3.4) |
| Other type of chronic skin breakdown | 14 (48.3) |
| Peripheral vascular disease | 27 (10.3) |
| Solid tumor (nonmetastatic) | 27 (10.3) |
| Other underlying conditions‡ | 125 (47.7) |
| Median CCI score (range) | 2 (0–14) |
*Values are no. (%) patients except as indicated. For patients with >1 incident case, demographics and clinical characteristics reflect those reported at the time of first incident case. CCI, Charlson Comorbidity Index. †Total number of patients with a completed case report form and information available for underlying conditions. ‡Underlying conditions reported for <10% of patients are included in the other underlying conditions category: current smoker (n = 23), myocardial infarct (n = 18), metastatic solid tumor (n = 13), alcohol abuse (n = 10), chronic liver disease (n = 10), transplant recipient (n = 9), connective tissue disease (n = 8), chronic bronchiectasis (n = 6), liver failure (n = 6), hematologic malignancy (n = 5), spina bifida (n = 5), cystic fibrosis (n = 4), inflammatory bowel disease/Crohn’s disease (n = 3), peptic ulcer disease (n = 3), HIV (n = 1), and intravenous drug user (n = 1).
Culture source, provider-reported infection type, and prior healthcare risk factors in incident carbapenem-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa cases, United States, July–October 2015
| Characteristic | No. (%) cases |
|---|---|
| Culture source | N = 294 |
| Any sterile site* | 21 (7.1) |
| Blood | 10 (47.6) |
| Internal abscess | 7 (33.3) |
| Pericardial fluid | 1 (4.8) |
| Peritoneal fluid | 1 (4.8) |
| Joint/synovial fluid | 1 (4.8) |
| Other normally sterile sites | 1 (4.8) |
| Nonsterile site† | 273 (92.9) |
| Respiratory‡ | 120 (44.0) |
| Urine | 111 (40.7) |
| Wound | 35 (12.8) |
| Other nonsterile sites | 9 (3.3) |
| Infection type§ | N = 268 |
| Urinary tract infection | 85 (31.7) |
| Pneumonia | 78 (29.1) |
| Septic shock | 20 (7.5) |
| Bacteremia | 20 (7.5) |
| Internal abscess | 11 (4.5) |
| Other infection types¶ | 57 (21.3) |
| >1 Infection type | 38 (14.2) |
| No infection | 35 (13.1) |
| Risk factors | |
| Any healthcare exposure, n = 280# | 257 (91.8) |
| Indwelling device placed <7 d before culture, n = 280 | 194 (69.3) |
| Surgery in prior year, n = 280 | 111 (39.6) |
| Long-term care facility resident in prior year, n = 280 | 84 (30.0) |
| Culture collected after hospital day 3, n = 280 | 64 (22.9) |
| Long-term acute care hospitalization in prior year, n = 280 | 40 (14.3) |
| Current chronic dialysis, n = 280 | 29 (10.4) |
| Hospitalization in prior year, n = 247 | 205 (83.0) |
| Antimicrobial drug | 101 (65.2) |
*Includes 5 cases with CRPA from both sterile and nonsterile sites collected at time of incident culture (1 blood and tracheal aspirate; 1 blood and catheter tip; 1 blood and urine; 1 internal abscess and sputum; 1 pericardial fluid and wound). †Total number of nonsterile sites is >273 because 2 case-patients had CRPA in multiple nonsterile sites at time of incident culture (1 sputum and tracheal aspirate; 1 urine and tracheal aspirate). ‡Includes sputum (n = 70), tracheal aspirate (n = 38), and bronchoalveolar lavage (n = 12). §Total number of incident cases with completed case report form, excluding 13 cases with unknown infections. ¶Other infection types include the following: cellulitis (n = 9), decubitus/pressure ulcer (n = 7), chronic ulcer/wound (n = 6), bronchitis (n = 6), osteomyelitis (n = 6), surgical incision infection (n = 4), infection, not specified (n = 3), upper respiratory tract infection (n = 3), pyelonephritis (n = 2), cystic fibrosis exacerbation (n = 2), surgical site infection (n = 2), catheter site infection (n = 1), peritonitis (n = 1), skin abscess (n = 1), empyema (n = 1), septic arthritis (n = 1), wound (n = 1), other infection (n = 1). #Total number of incident cases with completed case report form, excluding 1 case with unknown healthcare risk factors. **Total number of incident cases with completed case report form and their culture collected in a short-stay or long-term acute care hospital.
Antimicrobial susceptibility of carbapenem-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates from incident cases based on testing at local clinical laboratory, by epidemiologic classification, United States, July–October 2015*
| Antimicrobial agent | No. susceptible/total no. tested (%) | Epidemiologic classification, no. susceptible/total no. tested (%)* | p value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Healthcare-associated | Community-associated | |||
| Cephalosporins | ||||
| Any cephalosporin | 181/275 (65.8) | 153/241 (63.5) | 18/21 (85.7) | 0.04 |
| Ceftazidime | 101/151 (66.9) | 89/136 (65.4) | 6/6 (100) | 0.18† |
| Cefepime | 146/273 (53.5) | 120/239 (50.2) | 17/21 (81.0) | 0.01 |
| Aminoglycosides | ||||
| Any aminoglycoside | 246/276 (89.1) | 212/241 (88.0) | 21/21 (100) | 0.14† |
| Amikacin | 203/237 (85.7) | 179/213 (84.0) | 17/17 (100) | 0.08† |
| Gentamicin | 162/268 (60.5) | 134/234 (57.3) | 17/20 (85.0) | 0.02 |
| Tobramycin | 118/180 (65.6) | 104/164 (63.4) | 7/7 (100) | 0.10† |
| Fluoroquinolones | ||||
| Any fluoroquinolone | 96/274 (35.0) | 74/240 (30.8) | 16/20 (80.0) | <0.01 |
| Ciprofloxacin | 93/266 (35.0) | 71/233 (30.5) | 16/19 (84.2) | <0.01 |
| Levofloxacin | 29/142 (20.4) | 23/128 (18.0) | 3/5 (60.0) | 0.05† |
| Other antimicrobials | ||||
| Aztreonam | 63/168 (37.5) | 46/146 (31.5) | 12/15 (80.0) | <0.01 |
| Piperacillin/tazobactam | 134/266 (50.4) | 106/231 (45.9) | 19/21 (90.5) | <0.01 |
| Resistance | No. multidrug-resistant/total no. tested (%) |
| ||
| Multidrug-resistant isolates‡ | 181/268 (67.5) | 167/234 (71.4) | 4/20 (20.0) | <0.01 |
*Antimicrobial susceptibilities by epidemiologic classification are restricted to the 281 incident cases with a completed case report form. Healthcare-associated is defined as a case with >1 healthcare risk factor reported; community-associated is defined as a case with no healthcare risk factors reported. †By Fisher exact test. ‡Defined as an isolate resistant to 1 carbapenem (doripenem, imipenem, meropenem) and nonsusceptible to >1 antimicrobial drug in >2 of the following classes: cephalosporin (ceftazidime, cefepime), aminoglycoside (amikacin, gentamicin, tobramycin), fluoroquinolone (ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin), β-lactamase inhibitor combination (piperacillin-tazobactam), and monobactam (aztreonam).
Characteristics of carbapenemase-producing isolates of carbapenem-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa from incident cases, United States, July–October 2015
| Isolate no. | Site | Carbapenemase | Carbapenemase gene location | ST | Antimicrobial resistance pattern* |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | New Mexico | IMP-18 | Plasmid | ST179 | AMK, CAZ, CAZ/AVI, CIP, DOR, FEP, GEN, IMI, LEV, MER, CEF/TAZ, TOB |
| 2 | New Mexico | VIM-2 | Chromosomal | ST308 | CAZ,† CAZ/AVI, CIP, DOR, GEN, IMI, LEV, MER, CEF/TAZ, TOB |
| 3 | Tennessee | HMB-2 | Chromosomal | ST235 | AMK, CAZ, CAZ/AVI, CIP, DOR, FEP, GEN, LEV, MER, PIP/TAZ, CEF/TAZ, TOB |
*Resistance pattern based on reference broth microdilution testing using 2019 Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute interpretative criteria. AMK, amikacin; CAZ, ceftazidime; CAZ/AVI, ceftazidime/avibactam; CEF/TAZ, ceftolozane-tazobactam; CIP, ciprofloxacin; DOR, doripenem; FEP, cefepime; GEN, gentamicin; HMB, Hamburg metallo-β-lactamase; IMI, imipenem; IMP, active-on-imipenem; LEV, levofloxacin; MER, meropenem; PIP/TAZ, piperacillin/tazobactam; ST, sequence type; TOB, tobramycin; VIM, Verona integron mediated. †Intermediate antimicrobial susceptibility.