Back to Search
Journal ArticleOpen Access

Genomic Insights Into the Mechanism of Carbapenem Resistance Dissemination in Enterobacterales From a Tertiary Public Heath Setting in South Asia

Author Affiliations
University of Oxford, Cardiff University, University Hospital of Wales, Public Health Wales, ...
Published InClinical Infectious Diseases
Year2022
Citations23

Abstract

SUMMARY: 10.6% patients were CRE positive. Only 27% patients were prescribed at least 1 antibiotic to which infecting pathogen was susceptible. Burn and ICU admission and antibiotics exposures facilitate CRE acquisition. Escherichia coli ST167 was the dominant CRE clone. BACKGROUND: Given the high prevalence of multidrug resistance (MDR) across South Asian (SA) hospitals, we documented the epidemiology of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) infections at Dhaka Medical College Hospital between October 2016 and September 2017. METHODS: We enrolled patients and collected epidemiology and outcome data. All Enterobacterales were characterized phenotypically and by whole-genome sequencing. Risk assessment for the patients with CRE was performed compared with patients with carbapenem-susceptible Enterobacterales (CSE). RESULTS: 10.6% of all 1831 patients with a clinical specimen collected had…
View at Publisher

BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.