Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Hospital Infection, Central Public Health Laboratory, London NW9 5HT, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In the last 15 years,
Burkholderia cepacia
has emerged as a significant pathogen in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients, mainly due to the severity of infection observed in a subset of patients and the fear of transmission of the organism to noncolonized patients. Although patients who deteriorate rapidly cannot be predicted by microbiological characteristics, three genetic markers have been described for strains that spread between patients. These are the
cblA
gene, encoding giant cable pili; a hybrid of two insertion sequences, IS
1356
and IS
402
; and a 1.4-kb open reading frame known as the
B. cepacia
epidemic strain marker (BCESM). The latter two are of unknown function. An epidemic strain lineage was previously identified among CF patients in the United Kingdom that apparently had spread from North America and that was characterized by a specific random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) pattern. We searched for the described genetic markers using specific PCR assays with 117 patient isolates of
B. cepacia
from 40 United Kingdom hospitals. Isolates were grouped according to genomovar and epidemic strain lineage RAPD pattern with a 10-base primer, P272. A total of 41 isolates from patients in 12 hospitals were classified as the epidemic strain, and 40 of these were distributed in genomovars IIIa (11 isolates), IIIb (1 isolate), and IIIc (28 isolates). All isolates of the epidemic strain were positive for the
cblA
gene and BCESM, but two lacked the insertion sequence hybrid. None of the 76 sporadic isolates contained
cblA
or the insertion sequence hybrid, but 11 of them were positive for BCESM. Nonepidemic isolates were distributed among genomovars I or IV (9), II (49), IIIa (11), IIIb (3), and IIIc (4). There were three clusters of cross-infection (one involving two patients and two involving three patients) with isolates of genomovar II. We conclude that in the United Kingdom, a single clonal lineage has spread between and within some hospitals providing care for CF patients. The presence of the
cblA
gene is the most specific marker for the epidemic strain. We recommend that all isolates of
B. cepacia
from CF patients should be screened by PCR to influence segregation and infection control strategies.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
80 articles.
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