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Epidemic of carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae in Europe is driven by nosocomial spread

Authors :
David, Sophia Reuter, Sandra Harris, Simon R. Glasner, Corinna Feltwell, Theresa Argimon, Silvia Abudahab, Khalil and Goater, Richard Giani, Tommaso Errico, Giulia Aspbury, Marianne Sjunnebo, Sara Feil, Edward J. Rossolini, Gian Maria Aanensen, David M. Grundmann, Hajo Koraqi, Andi and Lacej, Denada Apfalter, Petra Hartl, Rainer Glupczynski, Youri Huang, Te-Din Strateva, Tanya Marteva-Proevska, Yuliya and Tambic Andrasevic, Arjana Butic, Iva Pieridou-Bagatzouni, Despo Maikanti-Charalampous, Panagiota Hrabak, Jaroslav and Zemlickova, Helena Hammerum, Anette Jakobsen, Lotte Ivanova, Marina Pavelkovich, Anastasia Jalava, Jari Osterblad, Monica and Dortet, Laurent Vaux, Sophie Kaase, Martin Gatermann, Soeren G. Vatopoulos, Alkiviadis Tryfinopoulou, Kyriaki and Toth, Akos Janvari, Laura Boo, Teck Wee McGrath, Elaine and Carmeli, Yehuda Adler, Amos Pantosti, Annalisa Monaco, Monica Raka, Lul Kurti, Arsim Balode, Arta Saule, Mara and Miciuleviciene, Jolanta Mierauskaite, Aiste Perrin-Weniger, Monique Reichert, Paul Nestorova, Nina Debattista, Sonia and Mijovic, Gordana Lopicic, Milena Samuelsen, Orjan Haldorsen, Bjorg Zabicka, Dorota Literacka, Elzbieta Canica, Manuela and Manageiro, Vera Kaftandzieva, Ana Trajkovska-Dokic, Elena and Damian, Maria Lixandru, Brandusa Jelesic, Zora Trudic, Anika Niks, Milan Schreterova, Eva Pirs, Mateja Cerar, Tjasa Oteo, Jesus Aracil, Belen Giske, Christian and Sjostrom, Karin Gur, Deniz Cakar, Asli Woodford, Neil and Hopkins, Katie Wiuff, Camilla Brown, Derek J. EuSCAPE Working Grp ESGEM Study Grp
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Public health interventions to control the current epidemic of carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae rely on a comprehensive understanding of its emergence and spread over a wide range of geographical scales. We analysed the genome sequences and epidemiological data of >1,700 K. pneumoniae samples isolated from patients in 244 hospitals in 32 countries during the European Survey of Carbapenemase-Producing Enterobacteriaceae. We demonstrate that carbapenemase acquisition is the main cause of carbapenem resistance and that it occurred across diverse phylogenetic backgrounds. However, 477 of 682 (69.9%) carbapenemase-positive isolates are concentrated in four clonal lineages, sequence types 11,15,101, 258/512 and their derivatives. Combined analysis of the genetic and geographic distances between isolates with different beta-lactam resistance determinants suggests that the propensity of K. pneumoniae to spread in hospital environments correlates with the degree of resistance and that carbapenemase-positive isolates have the highest transmissibility. Indeed, we found that over half of the hospitals that contributed carbapenemase-positive isolates probably experienced within-hospital transmission, and interhospital spread is far more frequent within, rather than between, countries. Finally, we propose a value of 21 for the number of single nucleotide polymorphisms that optimizes the discrimination of hospital clusters and detail the international spread of the successful epidemic lineage, ST258/512.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2127..3dbeda0e3a466b91df5ef77292855700