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Clinical, microbiological and genomic characterization of Gram-negative bacteria with dual carbapenemases as identified by rapid molecular testing

Dual carbapenemase-producing organisms (DCPOs) are an emerging threat that expands the spectrum of antimicrobial resistance. There is limited literature on the clinical and genetic epidemiology of DCPOs. DCPO isolates were identified by Xpert Carba-R PCR testing of routine diagnostic cultures perfor...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:JAC-antimicrobial resistance 2024-02, Vol.6 (1), p.dlad137-dlad137
Main Authors: Mushtaq, Ammara, Alburquerque, Bremy, Chung, Marilyn, Fabre, Shelcie, Sullivan, Mitchell J, Nowak, Michael, Sordillo, Emilia M, Polanco, Jose, van Bakel, Harm, Gitman, Melissa R
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Dual carbapenemase-producing organisms (DCPOs) are an emerging threat that expands the spectrum of antimicrobial resistance. There is limited literature on the clinical and genetic epidemiology of DCPOs. DCPO isolates were identified by Xpert Carba-R PCR testing of routine diagnostic cultures performed from 2018 to 2021 at a New York City health system. WGS was performed by Illumina and/or PacBio. Medical records of patients were reviewed for clinical and epidemiological data. Twenty-six DCPO isolates were obtained from 13 patients. (  = 22) was most frequent, followed by (  = 2), (  = 1) and (  = 1). The most common DCPO combination was / (  = 16). Notably, 1.05% (24/2290) of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales isolates were identified as DCPOs. The susceptibility profiles matched the identified resistance genes, except for a ( / ) isolate that was phenotypically susceptible to meropenem. Eleven patients were hospitalized within the year prior to admission, and received antibiotic(s) 1 month prior. Seven patients were originally from outside the USA. Hypertension, kidney disease and diabetes were frequent comorbidities. Death in two cases was attributed to DCPO infection. WGS of eight isolates showed that carbapenemases were located on distinct plasmids, except for one isolate where NDM and KPC carbapenemases were located on a single IncC-type plasmid backbone. Here we characterized a series of DCPOs from New York City. Foreign travel, prior hospitalization, antibiotic usage and comorbidities were common among DCPO cases. All carbapenemases were encoded on plasmids, which may facilitate horizontal transfer.
ISSN:2632-1823
2632-1823
DOI:10.1093/jacamr/dlad137