Trends in Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria Isolated from Screening Clinical Samples in a Tertiary Care Hospital over the 2018–2022 Period

Author:

Lemonnier Delphine1,Machuel Marine2,Obin Odile2,Outurquin Gaëtan2,Adjidé Crespin2,Mullié Catherine23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Unité de Prévention du Risque Infectieux, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Amiens-Picardie, 80054 Amiens, France

2. Laboratoire Hygiène Risque Biologique & Environnement, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Amiens-Picardie, 80054 Amiens, France

3. Laboratoire AGIR UR UPJV 4294, UFR de Pharmacie, Université de Picardie Jules Verne, 80037 Amiens, France

Abstract

To assess the putative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria recovered from routine screening samples and, more globally, the trends in time to first positive screening sample and carriage duration of those bacteria in patients admitted to a tertiary hospital, data from laboratory results were retrospectively mined over the 2018–2022 period. No significant differences could be found in the number of positive patients or MDR isolates per year, time to positive screening, or carriage duration. Extended-spectrum beta-lactamase producers were dominant throughout the studied period but their relative proportion decreased over time as well as that of meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Meanwhile, carbapenemase-producing enterobacteria (CPE) proportion increased. Among the 212 CPE isolates, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Escherichia coli were the more frequent species but, beginning in 2020, a significant rise in Enterobacter cloacae complex and Citrobacter freundii occurred. OXA48 was identified as the leading carbapenemase and, in 2020, a peak in VIM-producing enterobacteria linked to an outbreak of E. cloacae complex during the COVID-19 pandemic was singled out. Finally, a worrisome rise in isolates producing multiple carbapenemases (NDM/VIM and mostly NDM/OXA48) was highlighted, especially in 2022, which could lead to therapeutic dead-ends if their dissemination is not controlled.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics,Biochemistry,Microbiology

Reference29 articles.

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