| Literature DB >> 31893042 |
Elena Schäfer1, Monika Malecki1, Carlos J Tellez-Castillo2, Niels Pfennigwerth3, Lennart Marlinghaus3, Paul G Higgins4, Frauke Mattner1, Andreas F Wendel1.
Abstract
Background: Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a common pathogen causing hospital-acquired infections. Carbapenem resistance in P. aeruginosa is either mediated via a combination of efflux pumps, AmpC overexpression, and porin loss, or through an acquired carbapenemase. Carbapenemase-producing P. aeruginosa (CPPA) strains are known to cause outbreaks and harbour a reservoir of mobile antibiotic resistance genes, however, few molecular surveillance data is available. The aim of this study was to analyse the prevalence and epidemiology of CPPA in three German medical centres from 2015 to 2017.Entities:
Keywords: Carbapenemase; Pseudomonas aeruginosa; Surveillance; VIM-2
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31893042 PMCID: PMC6937969 DOI: 10.1186/s13756-019-0665-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Resist Infect Control ISSN: 2047-2994 Impact factor: 4.887
Fig. 1Overview of new cases with CPPA from 2015 to 2017 (Q = quarter year)
Characteristics of 21 patients with carbapenemase-producing P. aeruginosa
| Patient characteristics ( | Value |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | |
| mean | 62 |
| range | 20; 80 |
| Sex | |
| male | 16 (76.2%) |
| Source of first positive specimen | |
| respiratory tract | 7 (33.3%) |
| urine | 5 (23.8%) |
| screening (rectum) | 5 (23.8%) |
| wound | 2 (9.5%) |
| other | 2 (9.5%) |
| Infection/colonization with CPPA | |
| hospital-acquired | 15 (71.4%) |
| community-acquired | 6 (28.6%) |
| Day of acquisition during hospital stay (hospital-acquired CPPA only; | |
| mean | 19 |
| range | 8; 82 |
| Medical centres | |
| tertiary care | 20 (95.2%) |
| secondary care | 1 (4.8%) |
| children hospital | 0 (0%) |
| Ward type | |
| ICU | 14 (66.7%) |
| general ward | 7 (33.3%) |
| Medical departments | |
| surgery | 11 (52.4%) |
| internal medicine | 8 (38.1%) |
| others | 2 (9.5%) |
| Hospital-acquired infection (CDC) | |
| pneumonia | 5 (23.8%) |
| urinary tract | 2 (9.5%) |
| skin infection | 2 (9.5%) |
| Antipseudomonal antibiotic therapya | 15 (71.4%) |
| Surgerya | 15 (71.4%) |
| Nonsurgical interventiona | 19 (90.5%) |
| Dialysisa | 6 (28.6%) |
| Mechanical ventilationa | 16 (76.2%) |
| Woundsa | 15 (71.4%) |
| Central linea | 17 (80.1%) |
| Urinary cathetera | 18 (85.7%) |
awithin a maximal interval of 7 days before first isolation of CPPA
Fig. 2Epidemiological timeline and transmission route of PFGE type A VIM-2-producing P. aeruginosa. Each node represents one patient at time of first isolation. Arrow indicates genetically and epidemiological confirmed transmission events (dashed line = room-to-patient; continuous line = patient-to-patient). Encircled nodes indicate ward of transmission. Positions of the nodes on the y-axis were randomly chosen