Plasmid-mediated AmpC in Klebsiella pneumoniae and Escherichia coli from septicaemic neonates: diversity, transmission and phenotypic detection

•Prevalence of pAmpC genes in septicaemic neonates was 9% (30/348) across 13 years.•blaDHA & blaCMY were predominant in K. pneumoniae and E. coli, respectively.•Diverse STs were noted, i.e. novel ST1134 and ST1135 and epidemic ST11 and ST147.•Transfer of pAmpC found in 12/30 strains; 8/12 cases...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of global antimicrobial resistance. 2023-09, Vol.34, p.9-14
Hauptverfasser: Rao, Ankur, Naha, Sharmi, Bhattacharjee, Amrita, Chattopadhyay, Pinaki, Dutta, Shanta, Basu, Sulagna
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Prevalence of pAmpC genes in septicaemic neonates was 9% (30/348) across 13 years.•blaDHA & blaCMY were predominant in K. pneumoniae and E. coli, respectively.•Diverse STs were noted, i.e. novel ST1134 and ST1135 and epidemic ST11 and ST147.•Transfer of pAmpC found in 12/30 strains; 8/12 cases showed cotransfer of blaNDM.•Combination disk-diffusion test precisely detected pAmpC in 23/30 cases. Presence and dissemination of plasmid-mediated AmpC genes (pAmpCs) have made bacteria cephalosporin-resistant and assessment of their prevalence and diversity is essential. Coexistence of pAmpCs with New Delhi metallo-β-lactamase (blaNDM) has facilitated their spread and NDM interferes with correct pAmpC phenotypic identification. Assessment of pAmpCs in different species and sequence types (STs), co-transmission with blaNDM and phenotypic detection were analysed among Klebsiella pneumoniae (n = 256) and Escherichia coli (n = 92) isolated from septicaemic neonates over 13 years. pAmpCs were present in 9% (30/348) of strains, 5% in K. pneumoniae and 18% in E. coli. pAmpC genes (blaCMY and blaDHA) were detected, blaCMY-42 and blaDHA-1 variants being predominant. Strains were resistant to most antimicrobials tested. blaCMY and blaDHA were dominant among E. coli (14/17) and K. pneumoniae (9/13), respectively. pAmpC-bearing strains belonged to diverse STs, including epidemic K. pneumoniae ST11 and ST147. Some strains co-harboured carbapenemase genes, blaNDM (17/30) and blaOXA-48 (5/30). In 40% (12/30) of strains, pAmpC genes were transferred by conjugation, of which 8/12 exhibited co-transfer with blaNDM. pAmpCs were frequently found in replicons as follows: blaDHA-1 with IncHIB-M, blaCMY-4 with IncA/C, blaCMY-6 with IncA/C, and blaCMY-42 with IncFII. The combination disk-diffusion test correctly detected pAmpC in 77% (23/30) of pAmpC-bearing strains. However, correct detection of pAmpC was higher in strains that did not harbour blaNDM vs. those with blaNDM (85% vs. 71%). Presence of pAmpCs along with carbapenemases, linkage with multiple STs, and replicon types indicated their potential for spread. pAmpCs can go undetected in the presence of blaNDM; hence, regular surveillance is required.
ISSN:2213-7165
2213-7173
DOI:10.1016/j.jgar.2023.05.012