4.5 Article

Outbreak of plasmid-mediated NDM-1-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae ST105 among neonatal patients in Yunnan, China

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12941-016-0124-6

Keywords

CPE; NDM-1; ST105; China

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Funding

  1. Yunnan Science and Technology Commission from Yunnan provincial Science and Technology Department [2013FB205, 2015BC001]
  2. Kunming Medical University

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Background: In the past decade, the carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (CPE) have been reported worldwide. Emergence of carbapenemase-producing strains among Enterobacteriaceae has been a challenge for treatment of clinical infection. The present study was undertaken to investigate the characteristics of carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae recovered from an outbreak that affected 17 neonatal patients in neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) of Kunming City Maternal and Child health Hospital, which is located in the Kunming city in far southwest of China. Methods: Minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) for antimicrobial agents were determined according to the guidelines of the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI); Modified Hodge test and Carba-NP test were preformed to identified the phenotypes of carbapenemases producing; To determine whether carbapenem resistance was transferable, a conjugation experiment was carried out in mixed broth cultures; Resistant genes were detected by using PCR and sequencing; Plasmids were typed by PCR-based replicon typing method; Clone relationships were analyzed by using multilocus-sequence typing (MLST) and pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Results: Eighteen highly carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae were isolated from patients in NICU and one carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae isolate was detected in incubator water. All these isolates harbored bla(NDM-1). Moreover, other resistance genes, viz., bla(IMP-4), bla(SHV-1), bla(TEM-1), bla(CTX-M-15), qnrS1, qnrB4, and aacA4 were detected. The bla(NDM-1) gene was located on a ca. 50 kb IncFI type plasmid. PFGE analysis showed that NDM-1-producing K. pneumoniae were clonally related and MLST assigned them to sequence type 105. Conclusions: NDM-1 producing strains present in the hospital environment pose a potential risk and the incubator water may act as a diffusion reservoir of NDM-1-producing bacteria. Nosocomial surveillance system should play a more important role in the infection control to limit the spread of these pathogens.

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