Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Microbiology, Sir Patrick Dun Translational Research Laboratory, School of Medicine, Trinity College Dublin, St. James's Hospital Campus, Dublin 8, Ireland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Escherichia coli
is a major cause of bloodstream infections and death due to sepsis. It is the most frequent Gram-negative bacterial pathogen recovered from cultures of blood from both community-acquired and nosocomial cases. We set out to determine the relationships between
E. coli
virulence factors (VFs), phylogenetic groups, and antibiotic resistance and whether bacteremia cases had a community, health care-associated. or nosocomial origin. Isolates from consecutive episodes of
E. coli
bacteremia in 303 patients presenting to a university hospital were screened for their VFs, phylogenetic group, and antibiotic resistance. The majority of VFs present in the collection were equally distributed between antibiotic-susceptible and multiple-drug-resistant (MDR) isolates, but the overall VF score was higher for isolates of community and health care-associated origin than those of nosocomial origin (
P
= 0.0002 and
P
= 0.0172, respectively); the
papA
,
papG
allele II,
hlyA
, and
hek
VFs were more prevalent in this cohort. Most isolates belonged to phylogenetic group B2, which harbored a greater proportion of antibiotic-susceptible isolates than MDR isolates (
P
= 0.04). The community, health care-associated, or nosocomial origin of
E. coli
bacteremia determines the virulence capacity of an isolate better than the phylogenetic group does. This study provides new insights into the relationships between the pathogenesis and epidemiology of
E. coli
bacteremia.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
42 articles.
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