Spanish nationwide survey on Pseudomonas aeruginosa antimicrobial resistance mechanisms and epidemiology

del Barrio-Tofino, Ester; Zamorano, Laura; Cortes-Lara, Sara; Lopez-Causape, Carla; Sanchez-Diener, Irina; Cabot, Gabriel; Bou, German; Martinez-Martinez, Luis; Oliver, Antonio; Galan, Fatima; Gracia, Irene; Rodriguez, Manuel Antonio; Martin, Lina; Sanchez, Juan Manuel; Vinuela, Laura; Garcia, Ma Victoria; Lepe, Jose Antonio; Aznar, Javier; Lopez-Hernandez, Inma; Seral, Cristina; Castillo-Garcia, Francisco Javier; Lopez-Calleja, Ana Isabel; de la Iglesia, Carmen Aspiroz Pedro; Ramon, Susana; Riera, Elena; Perez, Maria Cruz; Gallegos, Carmen; Calvo, Jorge; Quesada, Maria Dolores; Marco, Francesc; Hoyos, Yannick; Horcajada, Juan Pablo; Larrosa, Nieves; Gonzalez, Juan Jose; Tubau, Fe; Capilla, Silvia; Perez-Moreno, Mar Olga; Centelles, Ma Jose; Padilla, Emma; Rivera, Alba; Mirelis, Beatriz; Rodriguez-Tarazona, Raquel Elisa; Arenal-Andres, Noelia; Ortega, Maria del Pilar; Megias, Gregoria; Garcia, Inmaculada; Colmenarejo, Cristina; Gonzalez, Jose Carlos; Martinez, Nora Mariela; Gomila, Ba Prime Rbara; Giner, Salv

Publicación: JOURNAL OF ANTIMICROBIAL CHEMOTHERAPY
2019
VL / 74 - BP / 1825 - EP / 1835
abstract
Objectives To undertake a Spanish nationwide survey on Pseudomonas aeruginosa molecular epidemiology and antimicrobial resistance. Methods Up to 30 consecutive healthcare-associated P. aeruginosa isolates collected in 2017 from each of 51 hospitals were studied. MICs of 13 antipseudomonal agents were determined by broth microdilution. Horizontally acquired beta-lactamases were detected by phenotypic methods and PCR. Clonal epidemiology was evaluated through PFGE and MLST; at least one XDR isolate from each clone and hospital (n=185) was sequenced. Results The most active antipseudomonals against the 1445 isolates studied were colistin and ceftolozane/tazobactam (both 94.6% susceptible, MIC50/90=1/2mg/L) followed by ceftazidime/avibactam (94.2% susceptible, MIC50/90=2/8mg/L). Up to 252 (17.3%) of the isolates were XDR. Carbapenemases/ESBLs were detected in 3.1% of the isolates, including VIM, IMP, GES, PER and OXA enzymes. The most frequent clone among the XDR isolates was ST175 (40.9%), followed by CC235 (10.7%), ST308 (5.2%) and CC111 (4.0%). Carbapenemase production varied geographically and involved diverse clones, including 16.5% of ST175 XDR isolates. Additionally, 56% of the sequenced XDR isolates showed horizontally acquired aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes, which correlated with tobramycin resistance. Two XDR isolates produced QnrVC1, but fluoroquinolone resistance was mostly caused by QRDR mutations. Beyond frequent mutations (>60%) in OprD and AmpC regulators, four isolates showed AmpC mutations associated with resistance to ceftolozane/tazobactam and ceftazidime/avibactam. Conclusions ST175 is the most frequent XDR high-risk clone in Spanish hospitals, but this nationwide survey also indicates a complex scenario in which major differences in local epidemiology, including carbapenemase production, need to be acknowledged in order to guide antimicrobial therapy.

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