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Screening of Antimicrobial Resistance Genes and Epidemiological Features in Hospital and Community-Associated Carbapenem-Resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa Infections

Ayşegül Çopur Çiçek, Ayşe Ertürk, Nebahat Ejder, Erva Rakıcı, Uğur Kostakoğlu, İlknur Esen Yıldız, Songül Özyurt, Emine Sönmez

2021Infection and Drug Resistance31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Introduction: Researching carbapenem-resistant isolates enables the identification of carbapenemase-producing bacteria and prevents their spread. Methods: P. aeruginosa isolates were recovered from Medicine Faculty of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan University and identified by conventional methods and the automated Vitek 2 Compact system. Antimicrobial susceptibility experiments were performed in accordance with CLSI criteria and the automated Vitek 2 Compact system. The PCR method was investigated for the presence of β-lactamase resistance genes. PFGE typing was performed to show clonal relation among samples. Results: Seventy P. aeruginosa isolates were isolated from seventy patients. Of the patients, 67.1% had contact with the health service in the last 90 days and 75.7% of the patients had received antimicrobial therapy in the previous 90 days. Twenty-four isolates were carbapenem resistant, 2 isolates were multidrug-resistant except colistin, and none of the samples had colistin resistance. The gene encoding β-lactamase or metallo-β-lactamase was found in a total of 36 isolates. The bla VEB and bla PER genes were identified in 1 and 5 isolates alone or 17 and 13 isolates in combination with other resistance genes, respectively. The bla NDM was the most detected metallo-β-lactamase encoding gene (n=18), followed by bla KPC (n=12). bla IMP and bla VIM were detected in 5 and 1 isolates, respectively. Also, the association of bla VEB - bla PER and bla VEB - bla KPC - bla NDM was found to be very high. Much more resistance genes and co-occurrence were detected in hospital-acquired samples than community-acquired samples. No difference was found between the community and hospital-associated isolates according to PFGE results. Simultaneously from 6 patients, other microorganisms were also isolated and 5 of them died. Conclusion: The average length of stay (days) was found to be significantly higher in HAI group than CAI group. The death of 5 patients with fewer or no resistance genes showed that the co-existence of other microorganisms in addition to resistance genes was important on death. Keywords: Pseudomonas aeruginosa , antibiotic resistance genes, epidemiology, PFGE

Topics & Concepts

ColistinPseudomonas aeruginosaMicrobiologyPulsed-field gel electrophoresisCarbapenemBiologyAntimicrobialAntibiotic resistanceMultiple drug resistanceTypingDrug resistanceGeneAntibioticsBacteriaGenotypeGeneticsAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaBacterial Identification and Susceptibility TestingInfections and bacterial resistance