Back to Search Start Over

Spread of Vancomycin-ResistantEnterococcus faeciumIsolates Despite Validated Infection Control Measures in an Italian Hospital: Antibiotic Resistance and Genotypic Characterization of the Endemic Strain

Authors :
Floriana Campanile
Enrico Angelo Tonin
Anna Knezevich
Roberto Luzzati
Jacopo Monticelli
Stefania Stefani
Annalisa Milan
Lucilla Dolzani
Maria Santagati
Raffaela Bressan
Dafne Bongiorno
Manuela Di Santolo
Cristina Lagatolla
Marina Busetti
Bressan, Raffaela
Knezevich, Anna
Monticelli, Jacopo
Campanile, Floriana
Busetti, Marina
Santagati, Maria
Dolzani, Lucilla
Milan, Annalisa
Bongiorno, Dafne
Di Santolo, Manuela
Tonin, Enrico A
Stefani, Stefania
Luzzati, Roberto
Lagatolla, Cristina
Source :
Microbial Drug Resistance. 24:1148-1155
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert Inc, 2018.

Abstract

An alarming increase of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VREfm) isolates was detected in an Italian referral hospital subjected to policies of infection control validated by the Joint Commission International. Analysis of the population structure of 122 consecutive, nonreplicate VREfm isolates collected over an 18-month period identified a single major clone that spread around the whole hospital, rapidly establishing an endemic state. It belonged to sequence type (ST) 17 and showed a highly multidrug-resistant phenotype, being resistant to all antimicrobial classes for the carriage of several resistance determinants. Furthermore, some strains with decreased susceptibility to daptomycin were detected. Eighteen out of the 122 isolates did not group in the major clone. They showed a low spreading potential inside the hospital wards, even if most of them displayed a multidrug-resistant phenotype and belonged to a hospital-adapted lineage. Causes that led to the VREfm endemic state have not been fully elucidated. However, it is conceivable that the increase in systemic antibiotic consumption and the use of selective digestive tract decontamination, including vancomycin in critically ill patients during the period before 2014, may have played a role in the ST17 clone dissemination, but additional traits conferring high fitness in hospital environment cannot be excluded.

Details

ISSN :
19318448 and 10766294
Volume :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Microbial Drug Resistance
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....db5fde061c4c8660d9f4e7feb5b0a8d7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/mdr.2017.0314