4.6 Article

Fecal Carriage and Epidemiology of Extended-Spectrum Beta-Lactamase/Carbapenemases Producing Enterobacterales Isolates in Bulgarian Hospitals

Journal

ANTIBIOTICS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics10060747

Keywords

fecal carriage; ESBL; carbapenemases; Enterobacterales

Funding

  1. Medical University-Sofia, Bulgaria [71/23.04.2019, 8242/20.11.2018]

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This study investigated ESBL-producing Enterobacterales isolates in patients and hospital staff in two Bulgarian hospitals, finding a high prevalence of these bacteria with various resistance genes and plasmid types, indicating a significant presence of multidrug-resistant bacteria in the environment.
The gastrointestinal tract is an important reservoir of extended spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)/carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales isolates. This study included patients from two Bulgarian hospitals. Overall, 98 ESBL producers (including 68 Escherichia coli and 20 Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates) were detected among 99 hospitalized patients, 212 patients at admission, and 92 hospital staff in 42.4%, 24.5%, and 4%, respectively. We observed bla(CTX-M-15) in 47% of isolates, bla(CTX-M-3) in 39% and bla(CTX-M-14) in 11%. Three bla(CTX-M-15) positive isolates were also bla(KPC-2) positive. High transferability was detected for bla(CTX-M-3) carrying plasmids (55%) with L/M and I1 replicon plasmids, followed by CTX-M-14 (36.4%) and CTX-M-15 (27.9%) with IncF plasmids. BlaKPC-2 was carried by FIIAs plasmids. Epidemiology typing revealed 8 K. pneumoniae ST types-ST15(8/20), ST17(4/20), ST37(2/20) and 9 E. coli ST types-ST131 (30.9%, 21/68), ST38 (8/68), ST95(7/68) and ST316(7/68). All ST131 isolates but one was from the highly virulent epidemic clone O25bST131. This is the first report in Bulgaria about ESBL/carbapenemase faecal carriage. We observed high ESBL/carbapenemases prevalence. A predominant number of isolates were members of highly epidemic and virulent PanEuropean clones ST15 K. pneumoniae and O25bST131 E. coli. High antibiotics usage during the COVID pandemic will worsen the situation. Routine screenings and strict infection control measures should be widely implemented.

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