Affiliation:
1. National Medicines Institute , Warsaw, Poland
2. Międzyleski Specialist Hospital , Warsaw, Poland
3. County Hospital , Płońsk, Poland
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Consecutive Polish regions have become endemic for NDM-1-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae ST11, followed by K. pneumoniae ST147. Since 2017 a significant increase in NDM-positive Enterobacter hormaechei cases has been observed.
Objectives
To investigate the origin and character of this increase in NDM-positive E. hormaechei.
Methods
The analysis included 160 NDM-producing Enterobacter cloacae complex isolates, recovered in 2015–20 in 37 centres of 9/16 regions. These were typed by PFGE and MLST, and screened by PCR-mapping for NDM-1-encoding Tn125-like elements. Forty-four isolates were sequenced by MiSeq. Species identification was based on whole-genome average nucleotide identity; clonality and phylogeny were inferred by SNP approaches. The structural plasmid analysis was done for 12 isolates sequenced by MinION.
Results
The isolates belonged to 11 STs, predominantly ST89 (65.6%), followed by ST146 (15.6%), ST198 (7.5%) and ST1303 (3.7%), representing different E. hormaechei subspecies. Most of the isolates contained the Tn125A variant of the K. pneumoniae ST11 lineage, and several had Tn125F of the ST147. Individual E. hormaechei genotypes represented various epidemiological situations, from sporadic cases to single-hospital, city and regional outbreaks, including one caused by ST89 organisms with 82 cases in 17 centres. Acquisitions of the Tn125A/Tn125F determinants by the E. hormaechei strains occurred around 10 times and were plasmid-mediated, with a significant plasmid rearrangement in case of Tn125F.
Conclusions
The increase in E. hormaechei NDM-1 cases in Poland is a consequence of the uncontrolled spread of NDM-1-producing K. pneumoniae genotypes. Several E. hormaechei lineages have acquired NDM-encoding plasmids in different locales which started ‘secondary’ progressive outbreaks.
Funder
National Medicines Institute
SPUB MIKROBANK
Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology,Microbiology (medical)
Cited by
5 articles.
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