Affiliation:
1. Infectious Diseases Discovery Research, Wyeth Research, Pearl River, New York
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In concert with the development of novel β-lactams and broad-spectrum cephalosporins, bacterially encoded β-lactamases have evolved to accommodate the new agents. This study was designed to identify, at the sequence level, the genes responsible for the extended-spectrum-β-lactamase (ESBL) phenotypes of
Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae
, and
Proteus mirabilis
isolates collected during the global tigecycline phase 3 clinical trials. PCR assays were developed to identify and clone the
bla
TEM
,
bla
SHV
,
bla
OXA
, and
bla
CTX
genes from clinical strains. Isolates were also screened for AmpC genes of the
bla
CMY
,
bla
ACT
,
bla
FOX
, and
bla
DHA
families as well as the
bla
KPC
genes encoding class A carbapenemases.
E. coli, K. pneumoniae
, and
P. mirabilis
isolates with ceftazidime MICs of ≥2 μg/ml were designated possible ESBL-producing pathogens and were then subjected to a confirmatory test for ESBLs by use of Etest. Of 272 unique patient isolates, 239 were confirmed by PCR and sequencing to carry the genes for at least one ESBL, with 44% of the positive isolates harboring the genes for multiple ESBLs. In agreement with current trends for ESBL distribution,
bla
CTX-M
-type β-lactamase genes were found in 83% and 71% of the ESBL-positive
E. coli
and
K. pneumoniae
isolates, respectively, whereas
bla
SHV
genes were found in 41% and 28% of the ESBL-positive
K. pneumoniae
and
E. coli
isolates, respectively. Ninety-seven percent of the
E. coli
and
K. pneumoniae
isolates were tigecycline susceptible (MIC
90
= 2 μg/ml), warranting further studies to define the therapeutic utility of tigecycline against strains producing ESBLs in a clinical setting.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
57 articles.
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