Affiliation:
1. Sera & Vaccines Central Research Laboratory, 00-725 Warsaw,1 and
2. University Children’s Hospital, 00-628 Warsaw,2 Poland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In 1996 a large, 300-bed pediatric hospital in Warsaw, Poland, started a program of monitoring infections caused by extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL)-producing microorganisms. Over the first 3-month period eight
Klebsiella pneumoniae
isolates were identified as being resistant to ceftazidime. Six of these were found to produce the TEM-47 ESBL, which we first described in a
K. pneumoniae
strain recovered a year before in a pediatric hospital in Łódź, Poland, which is 140 km from Warsaw. Typing results revealed a very close relatedness among all these isolates, which suggested that the clonal outbreak in Warsaw was caused by a strain possibly imported from Łódź. The remaining two isolates expressed the SHV-5-like ESBL, which resulted from the horizontal transfer of a plasmid carrying the
bla
SHV
gene between nonrelated strains. The data presented here exemplify the complexity of the epidemiological situation concerning ESBL producers typical for large Polish hospitals, in which no ESBL-monitoring programs were in place prior to 1995.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
54 articles.
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