Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Microbiology, Henan Provincial People’s Hospital, People’s Hospital of Zhengzhou University, People’s Hospital of Henan University, Zhengzhou, Henan, 450003, PR China
2. Department of Clinical Laboratory, Xiayi Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital, Shangqiu, Henan, 4764007, PR China
3. Department of Clinical Laboratory, Zhoukou Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital, Zhoukou, Henan, 466000, PR China
Abstract
Introduction. Carbapenem-resistant
Enterobacteriaceae
(CRE) have been responsible for nosocomial outbreaks worldwide and have become endemic in several countries.
Hypothesis/Gap Statement. To better understand the epidemiological trends and characteristics of CRE in the Henan province.
Aim. We assessed the molecular epidemiological characteristics of 305 CRE strains isolated from patients in 19 secondary or tertiary hospitals in ten areas of the Henan province in China.
Methodology. A total of 305 CRE isolates were subjected to multiple tests, including in vitro antimicrobial susceptibility testing, PCR for carbapenemase genes bla
KPC, bla
NDM, bla
IMP, bla
VIM, bla
OXA-48-like. Tigecycline-resistant genes ramR, oqxR, acrR, tetA, rpsJ, tetX, tetM, tetL were analysed in five tigecycline non-susceptible carbapenem-resistant
Klebsiella pneumoniae
isolates (TNSCRKP). Additionally, multilocus sequence typing (MLST) was performed for carbapenem-resistant
K. pneumoniae
(CRKP).
Results. The most common CRE species were
K. pneumoniae
(234, 77 %),
Escherichia coli
(36, 12 %) and
Enterobacter cloacae
(13, 4 %). All strains exhibited multi-drug resistance. Overall, 97 % (295/305) and 97 % (297/305) of the isolates were susceptible to polymyxin B and tigecycline, respectively. A total of 89 % (271/305) of the CRE isolates were carbapenemase gene-positive, including 70 % bla
KPC, 13 % bla
NDM, 6 % bla
IMP, and 1 % combined bla
KPC/bla
NDM genes.
K. pneumoniae
carbapenemase (KPC) was the predominant carbapenemase in
K. pneumoniae
(87 %), whereas NDM and IMP were frequent in
E. coli
(53 %) and
E. cloacae
(69 %), respectively. Mutations in the ramR, tetA, and rpsJ genes were detected in five TNSCRKP. Moreover, 15 unique sequence types were detected, with ST11 (74 %), ST15 (9 %) and ST2237 (5 %) being dominant among
K. pneumoniae
strains.
Conclusion. A high proportion of CRE strains were carbapenemase-positive, and five carbapenem-resistant K. pneumonia isolates were tigecycline non-susceptible, indicating a need for the ongoing surveillance of CRE and effective measures for the prevention of CRE infections.
Funder
Science and Technology Department of Henan Province
Science and Technology Department, Henan Province
Subject
Microbiology (medical),General Medicine,Microbiology