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Title: Occurrence of multi-carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales in a tertiary hospital in Madrid (Spain): A new epidemiologic scenario. Author: Cabello M, Hernández-García M, Maruri-Aransolo A, Michelena M, Pérez-Viso B, Ponce-Alonso M, Cantón R, Ruiz-Garbajosa P. Journal: J Glob Antimicrob Resist; 2024 Sep; 38():281-291. PubMed ID: 38996870. Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Multi-carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales (M-CPE) are increasingly described. We characterized the M-CPE isolates prospectively recovered in our hospital (Madrid, Spain) over two years (2021-2022). METHODS: We collected 796 carbapenem resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) from clinical and surveillance samples. Carbapenemase production was confirmed with phenotypic (immunochromatographic, disk diffusion) and molecular (PCR, WGS) techniques. Antimicrobial susceptibility was evaluated by a standard broth microdilution method. Clinical and demographic data were collected. RESULTS: Overall, 23 M-CPE (10 Klebsiella pneumoniae, 6 Citrobacter freundii complex, 3 Escherichia coli, 2 Klebsiella oxytoca, and 2 Enterobacter hormaechei) isolates were recovered from 17 patients (3% with CPE, 0.26-0.28 cases per 1000 admissions). OXA-48 + KPC-3 (7/23) and KPC-3 + VIM-1 (5/23) were the most frequent carbapenemase combinations. All patients had prior antibiotics exposure, including carbapenems (8/17). High resistance rates to ceftazidime/avibactam (14/23), imipenem/relebactam (16/23) and meropenem/vaborbactam (7/23) were found. Ceftazidime/avibactam + aztreonam combination was synergistic in all metallo-β-lactamase producers. Clonal and non-clonal related isolates were found, particularly in K. pneumoniae (5 ST29, 3 ST147, 3 ST307) and C. freundii (3 ST8, 2 ST125, 1 ST563). NDM-1 + OXA-48 was introduced with the ST147-K. pneumoniae high-risk clone linked to the transfer of a Ukrainian patient. We identified four possible nosocomial clonal transmission events between patients of the same clone with the same combination of carbapenemases (KPC-3 + VIM-1-ST29-K. pneumoniae, NDM-1 + OXA-48-ST147-K. pneumoniae and KPC-2 + VIM-1-ST145-K. oxytoca). Carbapenemase-encoding genes were located on different plasmids, except for VIM-1 + KPC-2-ST145-K. oxytoca. Cross-species transmission and a possible acquisition overtime was found, particularly between K. pneumoniae and E. coli producing OXA-48 + KPC-3. CONCLUSION: M-CPE is an emerging threat in our hospital. Co-production of different carbapenemases, including metallo-β-lactamases, limits therapeutic options and depicts the need to reinforce infection control measures.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]