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Oxford University Press, JAC-Antimicrobial Resistance, 4(2), 2020

DOI: 10.1093/jacamr/dlaa084

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WGS characterization of MDR Enterobacterales with different ceftolozane/tazobactam susceptibility profiles during the SUPERIOR surveillance study in Spain

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

AbstractObjectivesTo analyse by WGS the ceftolozane/tazobactam (C/T) resistance mechanisms in Escherichia coli and Klebsiella spp. isolates recovered from complicated intra-abdominal and urinary tract infections in patients from Spanish ICUs (SUPERIOR surveillance study, 2016–17).MethodsThe clonal relatedness, the resistome and the virulome of 45 E. coli and 43 Klebsiella spp. isolates with different C/T susceptibility profiles were characterized.ResultsIn E. coli, two (C/T susceptible) carbapenemase producers (VIM-2-CC23, OXA-48-ST38) were detected. The most relevant clone was ST131-B2-O25:H4-H30 (17/45), particularly the CTX-M-15-ST131-H30-Rx sublineage (15/17). ST131 strains were mainly C/T susceptible (15/17) and showed an extensive virulome. In non-ST131 strains (28/45), CTX-M enzymes [CTX-M-14 (8/24); CTX-M-15 (6/24); CTX-M-1 (3/24); CTX-M-32 (2/24)] were found in different clones. C/T resistance was detected in non-clonal E. coli isolates (13%, 6/45) with ESBL (4/6) and non-ESBL (2/6) genotypes. Among Klebsiella spp., Klebsiella pneumoniae (42/43) and Klebsiella michiganensis (1/43) species were identified; 42% (18/43) were carbapenemase producers and 58% showed a C/T resistance phenotype (25/43). OXA-48-ST11 (12/18), OXA-48-ST392 (2/18), OXA-48-ST15 (2/18), NDM-1-ST101 (1/18) and OXA-48+VIM-2-ST15 (1/18) isolates were found, all C/T resistant. Correlation between carbapenemase detection and resistance to C/T was demonstrated (P < 0.001). In non-carbapenemase-producing K. pneumoniae (25/43), C/T resistance (28%, 7/25) was detected in ESBL (3/7) and AmpC (2/7) producers. Overall, an extensive virulome was found and was correlated with carbapenemase carriage (P < 0.001) and C/T resistance (P < 0.05), particularly in OXA-48-ST11 strains (P < 0.05).ConclusionsPrediction of antimicrobial susceptibility profiles using WGS is challenging. Carbapenemase-encoding genes are associated with C/T resistance in K. pneumoniae, but other resistance mechanisms might be additionally involved.