1. Epidemiologic and clinical impact of Acinetobacter baumannii colonization and infection: a reappraisal.
- Author
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Villar M, Cano ME, Gato E, Garnacho-Montero J, Miguel Cisneros J, Ruíz de Alegría C, Fernández-Cuenca F, Martínez-Martínez L, Vila J, Pascual A, Tomás M, Bou G, and Rodríguez-Baño J
- Subjects
- Aged, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Bacterial Typing Techniques, Cohort Studies, Colony Count, Microbial methods, Drug Resistance, Bacterial, Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field methods, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Spain epidemiology, Acinetobacter Infections diagnosis, Acinetobacter Infections drug therapy, Acinetobacter Infections epidemiology, Acinetobacter Infections physiopathology, Acinetobacter baumannii classification, Acinetobacter baumannii drug effects, Acinetobacter baumannii isolation & purification, Acinetobacter baumannii pathogenicity, Carbapenems pharmacology, Colistin pharmacology, Cross Infection diagnosis, Cross Infection drug therapy, Cross Infection epidemiology, Cross Infection microbiology, Cross Infection physiopathology
- Abstract
Acinetobacter baumannii is one of the most important antibiotic-resistant nosocomial bacteria. We investigated changes in the clinical and molecular epidemiology of A. baumannii over a 10-year period. We compared the data from 2 prospective multicenter cohort studies in Spain, one performed in 2000 (183 patients) and one in 2010 (246 patients), which included consecutive patients infected or colonized by A. baumannii. Molecular typing was performed by repetitive extragenic palindromic polymerase chain reaction (REP-PCR), pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), and multilocus sequence typing (MLST). The incidence density of A. baumannii colonization or infection increased significantly from 0.14 in 2000 to 0.52 in 2010 in medical services (p < 0.001). The number of non-nosocomial health care-associated cases increased from 1.2% to 14.2%, respectively (p < 0.001). Previous exposure to carbapenems increased in 2010 (16.9% in 2000 vs 27.3% in 2010, p = 0.03). The drugs most frequently used for definitive treatment of patients with infections were carbapenems in 2000 (45%) and colistin in 2010 (50.3%). There was molecular-typing evidence of an increase in the frequency of A. baumannii acquisition in non-intensive care unit wards in 2010 (7.6% in 2000 vs 19.2% in 2010, p = 0.01). By MSLT, the ST2 clonal group predominated and increased in 2010. This epidemic clonal group was more frequently resistant to imipenem and was associated with an increased risk of sepsis, although not with severe sepsis or mortality. Some significant changes were noted in the epidemiology of A. baumannii, which is increasingly affecting patients admitted to conventional wards and is also the cause of non-nosocomial health care-associated infections. Epidemic clones seem to combine antimicrobial resistance and the ability to spread, while maintaining their clinical virulence.
- Published
- 2014
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