Affiliation:
1. Departments of Pathology
2. Internal Medicine
3. Department of Pathology, Sinlau Christian Hospital, Tainan, Taiwan
4. Medical Technology, College of Medicine, National Cheng Kung University
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Ten nonrepetitive clinical isolates of
Klebsiella pneumoniae
exhibiting an unusual inducible β-lactam resistance phenotype were identified between January 1999 and September 2001 in a university hospital in Taiwan. In the presence of 2 μg of clavulanic acid, the isolates showed a one to four twofold concentration increase in the MICs of ceftazidime, cefotaxime, and aztreonam but remained susceptible to cefepime (MICs, ≤0.5 μg/ml) and imipenem (MICs, ≤0.5 μg/ml). PCR, sequence analysis, and isoelectric focusing revealed production by these isolates of TEM-1, SHV-11, and DHA-1, a plasmid-encoded inducible AmpC β-lactamase originally found in a
Salmonella enterica
serovar Enteritidis strain. Transfer of the resistance by conjugation experiments was not successful, but Southern hybridization showed that
bla
DHA-1
was located on 70-kb plasmids, suggesting that the
bla
DHA-1
-containing plasmids in the
K. pneumoniae
isolates were non-self-transmissible. Five isolates were recovered from patients in two surgery wards and two intensive care units. Acquisition of the DHA-1 producers could be traced back to previous hospitalizations 1 to 5 months earlier for the other five patients. Six and seven patterns among the isolates were demonstrated by plasmid analysis and ribotyping, respectively, indicating that the spread of the DHA-1 producers was due to both horizontal transfer of
bla
DHA-1
and dissemination of endemic clones.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
64 articles.
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