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Carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (CPE), including KPC-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae (KPC-Kpn), are an increasing threat to patient safety.To use WGS to investigate the extent and complexity of carbapenemase gene dissemination in a controlled KPC outbreak.Enterobacteriaceae with reduced ertapenem susceptibility recovered from rectal screening swabs/clinical samples, during a 3 month KPC outbreak (2013-14), were investigated for carbapenemase production, antimicrobial susceptibility, variable-number-tandem-repeat profile and WGS [short-read (Illumina), long-read (MinION)]. Short-read sequences were used for MLST and plasmid/Tn4401 fingerprinting, and long-read sequence assemblies for plasmid identification. Phylogenetic analysis used IQTree followed by ClonalFrameML, and outbreak transmission dynamics were inferred using SCOTTI.Twenty patients harboured KPC-positive isolates (6 infected, 14 colonized), and 23 distinct KPC-producing Enterobacteriaceae were identified. Four distinct KPC plasmids were characterized but of 20 KPC-Kpn (from six STs), 17 isolates shared a single pKpQIL-D2 KPC plasmid. All isolates had an identical transposon (Tn4401a), except one KPC-Kpn (ST661) with a single nucleotide variant. A sporadic case of KPC-Kpn (ST491) with Tn4401a-carrying pKpQIL-D2 plasmid was identified 10 months before the outbreak. This plasmid was later seen in two other species and other KPC-Kpn (ST14,ST661) including clonal spread of KPC-Kpn (ST661) from a symptomatic case to nine ward contacts.WGS of outbreak KPC isolates demonstrated blaKPC dissemination via horizontal transposition (Tn4401a), plasmid spread (pKpQIL-D2) and clonal spread (K. pneumoniae ST661). Despite rapid outbreak control, considerable dissemination of blaKPC still occurred among K. pneumoniae and other Enterobacteriaceae, emphasizing its high transmission potential and the need for enhanced control efforts.

Original publication

DOI

10.1093/jac/dkx264

Type

Journal article

Journal

The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy

Publication Date

11/2017

Volume

72

Pages

3025 - 3034

Addresses

Healthcare-Associated Infection Research Group, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.

Keywords

Humans, Enterobacteriaceae, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Klebsiella Infections, Cross Infection, beta-Lactamases, Bacterial Proteins, DNA, Bacterial, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Disease Outbreaks, Phylogeny, Gene Transfer, Horizontal, Genome, Bacterial, Plasmids, Adult, Aged, Middle Aged, Female, Male, Multilocus Sequence Typing, United Kingdom, Whole Genome Sequencing