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604. Gram-Negative Bacilli Carrying Multiple Carbapenemases: the United States, 2012–2018

BACKGROUND: Gram-negative bacilli carrying multiple carbapenemase genes (multi-CP-GNB) present an emerging public health threat; to date, most isolates reported in the literature have been from outside the United States. We reviewed multi-CP-GNB reported to CDC. METHODS: Reports of multi-CP-GNB isol...

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Autores principales: Ham, David, Mahon, Garrett, Bhaurla, Sandeep, Horwich-Scholefield, Sam, Klein, Liore, Dotson, Nychie, Rasheed, James, Huang, Jennifer, Brown, Allison C, Kallen, Alexander, Walters, Maroya S
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6810981/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.673
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author Ham, David
Mahon, Garrett
Bhaurla, Sandeep
Horwich-Scholefield, Sam
Klein, Liore
Dotson, Nychie
Rasheed, James
Huang, Jennifer
Brown, Allison C
Kallen, Alexander
Walters, Maroya S
author_facet Ham, David
Mahon, Garrett
Bhaurla, Sandeep
Horwich-Scholefield, Sam
Klein, Liore
Dotson, Nychie
Rasheed, James
Huang, Jennifer
Brown, Allison C
Kallen, Alexander
Walters, Maroya S
author_sort Ham, David
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Gram-negative bacilli carrying multiple carbapenemase genes (multi-CP-GNB) present an emerging public health threat; to date, most isolates reported in the literature have been from outside the United States. We reviewed multi-CP-GNB reported to CDC. METHODS: Reports of multi-CP-GNB isolates carrying genes encoding >1 targeted carbapenemases (i.e., KPC, NDM, OXA-48-type, VIM, or IMP) were received from healthcare facilities, health departments, and public health laboratories, and included isolates tested through the AR Laboratory Network (ARLN) beginning in 2017 as well as isolates sent to CDC for reference testing. Epidemiologic data were gathered by health departments during public health investigations. RESULTS: From October 2012 to November 2018, 111 multi-CP-GNB isolates from 71 patients in 20 states were identified. Two patients had three different multi-CP-GNB and one patient had two different multi-CP-GNB. The majority of cases (76%) were reported in 2017 or later, after ARLN testing began. Among patients with multi-CP-GNB, the most common organism-mechanisms combination was Klebsiella pneumoniae carrying NDM and OXA-48-type enzymes (table). Urine (44%) and rectal (20%) were the most frequent specimen sources for isolates. The median age of patients was 63 years (range 2–89 years); most had specimens collected at acute care hospitals (87%) or post-acute care facilities (9%). Of 50 patients with information available, 37 traveled internationally in the 12 months prior to culture collection. Among these, 88% were hospitalized for ≥1 night while outside the United States with 10 countries reported, of which India was most common (n = 18). All 5 patients with Pseudomonas aeruginosa co-carrying carbapenemases reported recent hospitalization outside the United States. CONCLUSION: The multi-CP-GNB reported to CDC include diverse organisms and carbapenemase combinations and often harbored carbapenemases from different β-lactamase classes, which may severely limit treatment options. Healthcare exposures outside the United States were common; providers should ask about this exposure at healthcare admission and, when present, institute interventions to stop transmission in order to slow further US emergence. [Image: see text] DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures.
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spelling pubmed-68109812019-10-28 604. Gram-Negative Bacilli Carrying Multiple Carbapenemases: the United States, 2012–2018 Ham, David Mahon, Garrett Bhaurla, Sandeep Horwich-Scholefield, Sam Klein, Liore Dotson, Nychie Rasheed, James Huang, Jennifer Brown, Allison C Kallen, Alexander Walters, Maroya S Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: Gram-negative bacilli carrying multiple carbapenemase genes (multi-CP-GNB) present an emerging public health threat; to date, most isolates reported in the literature have been from outside the United States. We reviewed multi-CP-GNB reported to CDC. METHODS: Reports of multi-CP-GNB isolates carrying genes encoding >1 targeted carbapenemases (i.e., KPC, NDM, OXA-48-type, VIM, or IMP) were received from healthcare facilities, health departments, and public health laboratories, and included isolates tested through the AR Laboratory Network (ARLN) beginning in 2017 as well as isolates sent to CDC for reference testing. Epidemiologic data were gathered by health departments during public health investigations. RESULTS: From October 2012 to November 2018, 111 multi-CP-GNB isolates from 71 patients in 20 states were identified. Two patients had three different multi-CP-GNB and one patient had two different multi-CP-GNB. The majority of cases (76%) were reported in 2017 or later, after ARLN testing began. Among patients with multi-CP-GNB, the most common organism-mechanisms combination was Klebsiella pneumoniae carrying NDM and OXA-48-type enzymes (table). Urine (44%) and rectal (20%) were the most frequent specimen sources for isolates. The median age of patients was 63 years (range 2–89 years); most had specimens collected at acute care hospitals (87%) or post-acute care facilities (9%). Of 50 patients with information available, 37 traveled internationally in the 12 months prior to culture collection. Among these, 88% were hospitalized for ≥1 night while outside the United States with 10 countries reported, of which India was most common (n = 18). All 5 patients with Pseudomonas aeruginosa co-carrying carbapenemases reported recent hospitalization outside the United States. CONCLUSION: The multi-CP-GNB reported to CDC include diverse organisms and carbapenemase combinations and often harbored carbapenemases from different β-lactamase classes, which may severely limit treatment options. Healthcare exposures outside the United States were common; providers should ask about this exposure at healthcare admission and, when present, institute interventions to stop transmission in order to slow further US emergence. [Image: see text] DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures. Oxford University Press 2019-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6810981/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.673 Text en © The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Abstracts
Ham, David
Mahon, Garrett
Bhaurla, Sandeep
Horwich-Scholefield, Sam
Klein, Liore
Dotson, Nychie
Rasheed, James
Huang, Jennifer
Brown, Allison C
Kallen, Alexander
Walters, Maroya S
604. Gram-Negative Bacilli Carrying Multiple Carbapenemases: the United States, 2012–2018
title 604. Gram-Negative Bacilli Carrying Multiple Carbapenemases: the United States, 2012–2018
title_full 604. Gram-Negative Bacilli Carrying Multiple Carbapenemases: the United States, 2012–2018
title_fullStr 604. Gram-Negative Bacilli Carrying Multiple Carbapenemases: the United States, 2012–2018
title_full_unstemmed 604. Gram-Negative Bacilli Carrying Multiple Carbapenemases: the United States, 2012–2018
title_short 604. Gram-Negative Bacilli Carrying Multiple Carbapenemases: the United States, 2012–2018
title_sort 604. gram-negative bacilli carrying multiple carbapenemases: the united states, 2012–2018
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6810981/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.673
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