Author:
Taitt Chris Rowe,Leski Tomasz A.,Stockelman Michael G.,Craft David W.,Zurawski Daniel V.,Kirkup Benjamin C.,Vora Gary J.
Abstract
ABSTRACTMultidrug-resistant (MDR)Acinetobacter baumanniiinfections are of particular concern within medical treatment facilities, yet the gene assemblages that give rise to this phenotype remain poorly characterized. In this study, we tested 97 clinicalA. baumanniiisolates collected from military treatment facilities (MTFs) from 2003 to 2009 by using a molecular epidemiological approach that enabled for the simultaneous screening of 236 antimicrobial resistance genes. Overall, 80% of the isolates were found to be MDR, each strain harbored between one and 17 resistant determinants, and a total of 52 unique resistance determinants or gene families were detected which are known to confer resistance to β-lactam (e.g.,blaGES-11,blaTEM,blaOXA-58), aminoglycoside (e.g.,aphA1,aacC1,armA), macrolide (msrA,msrB), tetracycline [e.g.,tet(A),tet(B),tet(39)], phenicol (e.g.,cmlA4,catA1,cat4), quaternary amine (qacE,qacEΔ1), streptothricin (sat2), sulfonamide (sul1,sul2), and diaminopyrimidine (dfrA1,dfrA7,dfrA19) antimicrobial compounds. Importantly, 91% of the isolates harboredblaOXA-51-likecarbapenemase genes (including six new variants), 40% harbored theblaOXA-23carbapenemase gene, and 89% contained a variety of aminoglycoside resistance determinants with up to six unique determinants identified per strain. Many of the resistance determinants were found in potentially mobile gene cassettes; 45% and 7% of the isolates contained class 1 and class 2 integrons, respectively. Combined, the results demonstrate a facile approach that supports a more complete understanding of the genetic underpinnings of antimicrobial resistance to better assess the load, transmission, and evolution of MDR in MTF-associatedA. baumannii.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology