| Literature DB >> 35397546 |
Cornelia C H Wielders1, Leo M Schouls2, Sjoukje H S Woudt2, Daan W Notermans2,3, Antoni P A Hendrickx2, Jacinta Bakker2, Ed J Kuijper2,4, Annelot F Schoffelen2, Sabine C de Greeff2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Netherlands is currently considered a low endemic country for carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) and carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales (CPE), experiencing only sporadic hospital outbreaks. This study aims to describe susceptibility to carbapenems and the epidemiology of carbapenemase production in Enterobacterales in the Netherlands in 2017-2019.Entities:
Keywords: Carbapenem resistance; Carbapenemase production; E. coli; Enterobacterales; Hospitalization; K. pneumoniae; Risk factors; Surveillance; Travel
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35397546 PMCID: PMC8994189 DOI: 10.1186/s13756-022-01097-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Resist Infect Control ISSN: 2047-2994 Impact factor: 4.887
Fig. 1Categorization of automated and gradient strip test results for carbapenem susceptibility in E. coli and K. pneumoniae between 2017 and 2019 in 43 laboratories participating in the Infectious Diseases Surveillance Information System for Antimicrobial Resistance (ISIS-AR) in the Netherlands. EC: Escherichia coli, KP: Klebsiella pneumoniae. Screening breakpoint: meropenem 0.25 mg/L, imipenem 1 mg/L (according to the Dutch Society for Medical Microbiology (NVMM) Guideline Laboratory detection of highly resistant microorganisms (HRMO) (version 2.0, 2012) [11]). Clinical S breakpoint: meropenem 2 mg/L, imipenem 2 mg/L (according to EUCAST clinical breakpoint table, version 9.0 [12]). Clinical R breakpoint: meropenem 8 mg/L, imipenem 4 mg/L (according to EUCAST clinical breakpoint table, version 9.0 [12])
Number of unique species/carbapenemase-encoding allele combinationsa and number of personsb with a CPE isolate cultured in the Netherlands and submitted to the pathogen surveillance system (Type-Ned CPE), 2017–2019
| Number of CPE isolatesa | Number of persons with CPEb | Number of persons with one unique CPE isolate submitted | Number of persons with multiple unique CPE isolates submittedb | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | 234 | 201 | 172 | 29 |
| 2018 | 307 | 264 | 227 | 37 |
| 2019 | 354 | 299 | 269 | 30 |
| Total | 895 | 764 | 668 | 96 |
aOnly one unique species/carba-allele combination was included for the period 2017–2019. When similar unique species/carba-allele combinations were submitted in multiple years, they were only included in the first year in which they were recorded
bPersons were only included once for the period 2017–2019. When isolates were submitted for the same person in multiple years, they were only included in the first year in which they were recorded
Species, carbapenemase-encoding allele and material from CPE isolates cultured in the Netherlands and submitted to the pathogen surveillance system (Type-Ned CPE) per year and the trend over time, 2017–2019, the Netherlands
| Characteristic | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | Total | Time trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total number of isolates | 234 | 307 | 354 | 895 | |
| Total number of carbapenemase-encoding alleles | 244 | 328 | 379 | 951 | |
| Species | |||||
| 99 (42.3%) | 122 (39.7%) | 131 (37.2%) | 352 | ||
| 82 (35.0%) | 90 (29.3%) | 136 (38.4%) | 308 | ||
| 31 (13.2%) | 38 (12.4%) | 32 (9.0%) | 101 | ||
| 10 (4.3%) | 33 (10.7%) | 27 (7.6%) | 70 | ||
| Other species | 12 (5.1%) | 24 (7.8%) | 28 (7.9%) | 64 | |
| Most frequently identified carbapenemase-encoding allele (WGS) | |||||
| 14 (5.7%) | 11 (3.4%) | 11 (2.9%) | 36 | ||
| 13 (5.3%) | 6 (1.8%) | 1 (0.3%) | 20 | ↓ | |
| 37 (15.2%) | 37 (11.3%) | 46 (12.1%) | 120 | ||
| 18 (7.4%) | 61 (18.6%) | 77 (20.3%) | 156 | ↑ | |
| 5 (2.0%) | 6 (1.8%) | 10 (2.6%) | 21 | ||
| 89 (36.5%) | 125 (38.1%) | 145 (38.3%) | 359 | ||
| 13 (5.3%) | 22 (6.7%) | 26 (6.9%) | 61 | ||
| 6 (2.5%) | 10 (3.0%) | 11(2.9%) | 27 | ||
| 24 (9.8%) | 14 (4.3%) | 8 (2.1%) | 46 | ↓ | |
| Other carbapenemase-encoding gene | 14 (5.7%) | 22 (6.7%) | 23 (6.1%) | 59 | |
| No carbapenemase-encoding gene found | 8 (3.3%) | 14 (4.3%) | 21 (5.5%) | 43 | |
| No WGS results | 3 (1.2%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 3 | |
| Sample material | |||||
| Swab of throat/nose/perineum/rectum | 161 (68.8%) | 213 (69.4%) | 243 (68.6%) | 617 | |
| Urine | 29 (12.4%) | 44 (14.3%) | 68 (19.2%) | 141 | ↑ |
| Wound/ulcer/superficial infection | 7 (3.0%) | 13 (4.2%) | 18 (5.1%) | 38 | |
| Pus/aspirate/biopsy | 10 (4.3%) | 4 (1.3%) | 8 (2.3%) | 22 | |
| Sputum/bronchoalveolar lavage | 11 (4.7%) | 7 (2.3%) | 4 (1.1%) | 22 | ↓ |
| Blood | 10 (4.3%) | 4 (1.3%) | 5 (1.4%) | 19 | ↓ |
| Urine (catheter-related) | 3 (1.3%) | 9 (2.9%) | 3 (0.8%) | 15 | |
| Other/unknown | 3 (1.3%) | 13 (4.2%) | 5 (1.4%) | 21 | |
CPE carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales, WGS whole genome sequencing; ↑ statistically significant increasing trend for the period 2017–2019 (p < 0.05); ↓ statistically significant decreasing trend for the period 2017–2019 (p < 0.05)
Epidemiological data of CPE positive persons with an isolate cultured because of a presumed risk for carriage (screening) or a clinical indication (diagnostic) from the pathogen surveillance (Type-Ned CPE; sampling date 1 January 2017–30 June 2019) and of notifications (OSIRIS; sampling date 1 July–31 December 2019), the Netherlands
| Characteristic | Reason for culturing | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Screening (n = 462)a | Diagnostic (n = 192)b | Total (n = 660)c | |
| Sample taking locationd | |||
| Inpatient departments (excluding Intensive Care Units) | 174/348 (50.0) | 67/138 (48.6) | 241/487 (49.5) |
| Outpatient departments | 57/348 (16.4) | 27/138 (19.6) | 85/487 (17.5) |
| Intensive Care Units | 37/348 (10.6) | 12/138 (8.7) | 49/487 (10.0) |
| Other/unknown | 80/348 (23.0) | 32/138 (23.2) | 112/487 (23.0) |
| Residence | |||
| Living independently | 378 (81.8) | 153 (79.7) | 536 (81.2) |
| Nursing or elderly home/facilities for small-scale housing for elderly | 29 (6.3) | 21 (10.9) | 50 (7.6) |
| Asylum seekers centre | 17 (3.7) | 1 (0.5) | 18 (2.7) |
| Rehabilitation centre | 5 (1.1) | 6 (3.1) | 11 (1.7) |
| Other/unknown | 33 (7.1) | 11 (5.7) | 45 (6.8) |
| Underlying illnessd | |||
| No underlying illness | 164/348 (47.1) | 64/138 (46.4) | 228/487 (46.8) |
| Malignancy/leukaemia or organ/bone marrow transplantation or immunosuppressive therapy (steroids/chemotherapy) | 48/348 (13.8) | 19/138 (13.8) | 68/487 (14.0) |
| Renal dialysis | 13/348 (3.7) | 5/138 (3.6) | 18/487 (3.7) |
| Other/unknown | 123/348 (35.3) | 50/138 (36.2) | 173/487 (35.5) |
| Invasive medical procedure/diagnosticse | |||
| No | 53/114 (46.5) | 28/54 (51.9) | 82/173 (47.4) |
| Surgery | 24/114 (21.1) | 13/54 (24.1) | 39/173 (22.5) |
| Other (including invasive procedure like endoscopy, cystoscopy, urinary catheter, renal dialysis) | 31/114 (27.2) | 11/54 (20.4) | 43/173 (24.9) |
| Unknown | 6/114 (5.3) | 2/54 (3.7) | 9/173 (5.2) |
| Risk factorsf | |||
| No known risk factor/unknown | 94 (20.4) | 134 (69.8) | 232 (35.2) |
| Hospitalization abroad for > 24 h during the previous two months | 275 (59.5) | 28 (14.6) | 303 (45.9) |
| Hospitalized in a country in: | |||
| Western Asia (including Turkey) | 64/275 (23.3) | 10/28 (35.7) | 74/303 (24.4) |
| Northern Africa | 64/275 (23.3) | 7/28 (25.0) | 71/303 (23.4) |
| Southern Europe | 53/275 (19.3) | 4/28 (14.3) | 57/303 (18.8) |
| South Asia | 36/275 (13.1) | 2/28 (7.1) | 38/303 (12.5) |
| South-eastern Asia | 19/275 (6.9) | 1/28 (3.6) | 20/303 (6.6) |
| Western Europe | 10/275 (3.6) | 2/28 (7.1) | 12/303 (4.0) |
| Another region of the world/unknown | 29/275 (10.6) | 2/28 (7.1) | 31/303 (10.2) |
| Known CPE outbreak in own healthcare facility | 26 (5.6) | 4 (2.1) | 30 (4.6) |
| Contact with a hospital abroad in the last year in a different way than > 24 h during the previous two months | 31 (6.7) | 13 (6.8) | 45 (6.8) |
| Already known carrier of CPE | 11 (2.4) | 3 (1.6) | 16 (2.4) |
| Received care in a department of another healthcare facility with an ongoing outbreak of CPEg | 14 (3.0) | 2 (1.0) | 16 (2.4) |
| Travelling abroad in the past six/twelve months without hospitalization or visiting a hospitalh | 13 (2.8) | 8 (4.2) | 22 (3.3) |
CPE carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales
aNumbers and percentages are reported on person level with available questionnaire data for the characteristic (n = 462 as denominator) unless otherwise indicated
bNumbers and percentages are reported on person level with available questionnaire data for the characteristic (n = 192 as denominator) unless otherwise indicated
cNumbers and percentages are therefore reported on person level with n = 660 as denominator unless otherwise indicated. The total number includes 6 persons with an unknown/other reason for culturing in addition to the 462 screening and 192 diagnostic isolates (1 from Type-Ned CPE and 5 from OSIRIS)
dThis information was only available for the questionnaires in the pathogen surveillance (Type-Ned CPE)
eThis information was only available for the notification questionnaires in OSIRIS
fThe total number for this characteristic is higher than the total number of persons presented in the table and the summed percentage is higher than 100% because for some persons more than one answer was registered
gDefined in Type-Ned CPE as received care in a department of another healthcare facility with an ongoing outbreak of CPE in the previous two months; defined similarly in OSIRIS but without the addition of “in the previous two months”
hDefined as in the past six months in Type-Ned CPE and in the past twelve months in OSIRIS
Most frequently identified carbapenemase-encoding alleles and the corresponding reported geographic regions of the world and countries for persons who were recently hospitalized abroad, January 2017–June 2019a, the Netherlands
| Carbapenemase-encoding allele (WGS) | Number of persons being hospitalized abroad for > 24 h during the previous two monthsb ( | Geographic region(s) most frequently reported ( | Most prevalent countries |
|---|---|---|---|
| 84 | Northern Africa (35) | Morocco (29) | |
| Western Asia (30) | Turkey (29) | ||
| Southern Europe (6) | Egypt (4) | ||
| Spain (4) | |||
| 37 | Southern Europe (9) | Greece (5) | |
| South-eastern Asia (6) | Turkey (4) | ||
| Northern Africa (5) | India (3) | ||
| Western Asia (5) | Thailand (3) | ||
| South Asia (5) | |||
| 29 | Southern Asia (12) | India (10) | |
| Northern Africa (10) | Egypt (7) | ||
| Morocco (3) | |||
| 22 | South Asia (11) | India (7) | |
| South-eastern Asia (4) | Turkey (4) | ||
| Western Asia (4) | Thailand (3) | ||
| 15 | Southern Europe (8) | Greece (6) | |
| Western Asia (4) | Turkey (3) | ||
| 13 | Western Asia (6) | Turkey (6) | |
| Northern Africa (4) | Egypt (3) | ||
| 12 | Southern Europe (11) | Italy (8) | |
| Portugal (3) | |||
| 11 | Southern Europe (9) | Spain (5) |
CPE carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales; WGS whole genome sequencing
aOnly data from the pathogen surveillance (Type-Ned CPE) for persons with epidemiological data available were used in this table (sampling date January 2017–June 2019). Recent hospitalization abroad was defined as hospitalized abroad for more than 24 h during the two months prior to the CPE positive culture
bPersons with multiple identified carbapenemase-encoding alleles in a single sample were included in these numbers