NOSOCOMIAL OUTBREAK BY COLISTIN-RESISTANT KLEBSIELLA PNEUMONIA: A CASE REPORT Authors: Gupta M , PRADHAN B, BEHERA BC, NAIK AK, SINGH SK*
ABSTRACT
The dramatic increase of resistance in Klebsiella pneumoniae (K. pneumoniae) due to the misuse
of antibiotics poses one of the most significant health threats and is a global health concern.
Colistin, a last resort antibiotic is used extensively to treat carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella
pneumoniae infections. Present research carried out to analyze the molecular mechanism, clonal
types and outcomes of the infections caused by colistin-resistant K. pneumoniae in neonates
during an outbreak in neonate intensive care unit. Twenty eight cases of colistin-resistant,
carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae were identified between March and April 2016. Isolates
were genotyped using multi-locus sequence typing and molecular mechanism of colistin
resistance was ascertained. All the colistin resistant K. pneumoniae isolated from neonates during
outbreak have insertional inactivation by ISL3 family transposes in the mgrB gene and were
clonally related belong to ST11. PCR screening confirmed the presence of the blaOXA-48 and
blaSHV-34 genes. The observed mortality was 35.7% in two month periods. The present baseline report of colistin-resistant K. pneumoniae ST11 outbreak suggested the emergence of clones with
this phenotype that required paramount importance for future health monitoring and assessment.
Keywords: Antibiotics, ?-lactamase, colistin-resistance, Klebsiella pneumoniae, plasmid
Publication date: 01/12/2021 https://ijbpas.com/pdf/2021/December/MS_IJBPAS_2021_5751.pdfDownload PDFhttps://doi.org/10.31032/IJBPAS/2021/10.12.5751