International Epidemiology of Carbapenemase-Producing Escherichia coli
Author:
Boutzoukas Angelique E12ORCID, Komarow Lauren3, Chen Liang4, Hanson Blake5ORCID, Kanj Souha S6, Liu Zhengyin7, Salcedo Mendoza Soraya8, Ordoñez Karen9, Wang Minggui10ORCID, Paterson David L11, Evans Scott3ORCID, Ge Lizhao3, Giri Abhigya3, Hill Carol2, Baum Keri2, Bonomo Robert A1213, Kreiswirth Barry4, Patel Robin14ORCID, Arias Cesar A15, Chambers Henry F16, Fowler Vance G12, van Duin David17ORCID, Souha S Kanj, Jean Francois (Jeff) Jabbour, Fujie Zhang, Judith J Lok, Robert A Salata, Martin Stryjewski, Valentina Di Castelnuovo, Jose Millan Oñate Gutierrez, Eric Cober, Susan Richter, Deverick J Anderson, Beth Evans, Carol Hill, Heather R Cross, Keri Baum, Rebekka Arias, Vance G Fowler, Karen Ordoñez, Jesse T Jacob, Linghua Li, Barry N Kreiswirth, Claudia Manca, Liang Chen, Samit Desai, Erica Herc, Ezequiel Cordova, Maria Rioseco, Samuel Vichez, Marisa L Sanchez, Sandra Valderrama, Jairo Figueroa, Cesar A Arias, An Q Dinh, Diane Panesso, Kirsten Rydell, Truc T Tran, Fupin Hu, Jiachun Su, Jianping Jiang, Minggui Wang, Xiaogang Xu, Yang Yang, Jose M Munita, Maria Spencer, Thamer Alenazi, Robert A Bonomo, Steven H Marshall, Susan D Rudin, Charles Huskins, Kerry Greenwood-Quaintance, Robin Patel, Suzannah Schmidt-Malan, Sara Revolinski, Glenn Wortmann, Robert C Kalayjian, Greg Weston, Belinda Ostrowsky, Gopi Patel, Daniel Eiras, Angela Kim, Julia Garcia-Diaz, Soraya Salcedo, John J Farrell, Zhengyin Liu, Andrew Henderson, David L Paterson, Qing Xie, Keith S Kaye, Hainv Gao, Yunsong Yu, Mary Waters, Bettina C Fries, Brandon Eilertson, Kalisvar Marimuthu, Kean Lee Chew, Nares Smitasin, Paul Ananth Tambyah, Jason C Gallagher, Anton Peleg, Marcel Leroi, Lanjuan Li, Lauren Komarow, Lizhao Ge, Scott Evans, Todd McCarty, Henry F Chambers, Omai B Garner, Lilian M Abbo, David van Duin, Ebbing Lautenbach, Jennifer H Han, Yohei Doi, Darren Wong, Blake Hanson, Jinnethe Reyes, Maria Virginia Villegas Botero, Lorena Diaz, Federico Perez, Ritu Banerjee, Sorabh Dhar, Michael J Satlin, Zhiyong Zong,
Affiliation:
1. Division of Infectious Diseases, Duke University , Durham, North Carolina , USA 2. Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University , Durham, North Carolina , USA 3. The Biostatistics Center, George Washington University , Rockville, Maryland , USA 4. Center for Discovery and Innovation, Hackensack Meridian Health , Nutley, New Jersey , USA 5. Center for Infectious Diseases and Microbial Genomics, UTHealth, McGovern School of Medicine at Houston , Houston, Texas , USA 6. Division of Infectious Diseases, and Center for Infectious Diseases Research, American University of Beirut Medical Center , Beirut , Lebanon 7. Infectious Disease Section, Department of Internal Medicine, Peking Union Medical College Hospital , Beijing , China 8. Servicio de Infectología, Organizacion Clinica General del Norte , Barranquilla , Colombia 9. Department of Infectious Diseases, E.S.E. Hospital Universitario, San Jorge de Pereira , Pereira , Colombia 10. Institute of Antibiotics, Huashan Hospital, Fudan University , Shanghai , China 11. ADVANCE-ID, Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of Singapore , Singapore 12. Louis Stokes Cleveland Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center , Cleveland, Ohio , USA 13. VA–Case Center for Antibiotic Resistance and Epidemiology (Case-VA CARES) , Cleveland, Ohio , USA 14. Division of Clinical Microbiology, Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, and Division of Public Health, Infectious Diseases, and Occupational Medicine, Department of Medicine, Mayo Clinic , Rochester, Minnesota , USA 15. Division of Infectious Diseases and Center for Infectious Diseases, Houston Methodist Hospital and Houston Methodist Research Institute , Houston, Texas , USA 16. Department of Medicine, University of California San Francisco , San Francisco, California , USA 17. Division of Infectious Diseases, University of North Carolina , Chapel Hill, North Carolina , USA
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Carbapenemase-producing (CP) Escherichia coli (CP-Ec) are a global public health threat. We aimed to describe the clinical and molecular epidemiology and outcomes of patients from several countries with CP-Ec isolates obtained from a prospective cohort.
Methods
Patients with CP-Ec were enrolled from 26 hospitals in 6 countries. Clinical data were collected, and isolates underwent whole-genome sequencing. Clinical and molecular features and outcomes associated with isolates with or without metallo-β-lactamases (MBLs) were compared. The primary outcome was desirability of outcome ranking (DOOR) at 30 days after the index culture.
Results
Of the 114 CP-Ec isolates in Consortium on resistance against carbapenems in Klebsiella and other Enterobacterales-2 (CRACKLE-2), 49 harbored an MBL, most commonly blaNDM-5 (38/49, 78%). Strong regional variations were noted with MBL-Ec predominantly found among patients in China (23/49). Clinically, MBL-Ec were more often from urine sources (49% vs 29%), less often met criteria for infection (39% vs 58%, P = .04), and had lower acuity of illness when compared with non–MBL-Ec. Among patients with infection, the probability of a better DOOR outcome for a randomly selected patient with MBL-Ec as compared with non–MBL-Ec was 62% (95% CI: 48.2–74.3%). Among infected patients, non–MBL-Ec had increased 30-day (26% vs 0%; P = .02) and 90-day (39% vs 0%; P = .001) mortality compared with MBL-Ec.
Conclusions
Emergence of CP-Ec was observed with important geographic variations. Bacterial characteristics, clinical presentations, and outcomes differed between MBL-Ec and non–MBL-Ec. Mortality was higher among non-MBL isolates, which were more frequently isolated from blood, but these findings may be confounded by regional variations.
Funder
NIAID NIH US National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)
Cited by
9 articles.
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