학술논문

A high‐resolution genomic analysis of multidrug‐resistant hospital outbreaks of Klebsiella pneumoniae
Document Type
Report
Source
EMBO Molecular Medicine. March, 2015, Vol. 7 Issue 3, p227, 13 p.
Subject
Nucleotide sequencing -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Virulence (Microbiology) -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Genomics -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Bacterial pneumonia -- Health aspects -- Analysis
Genetic research -- Analysis -- Health aspects
DNA sequencing -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Biological diversity -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Drug resistance -- Health aspects -- Analysis
Genomes -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Phylogeny -- Health aspects -- Analysis
Pneumonia -- Health aspects -- Analysis
Language
English
ISSN
1757-4676
Abstract
Multidrug‐resistant (MDR) Klebsiella pneumoniae has become a leading cause of nosocomial infections worldwide. Despite its prominence, little is known about the genetic diversity of K. pneumoniae in resource‐poor hospital settings. Through whole‐genome sequencing (WGS), we reconstructed an outbreak of MDR K. pneumoniae occurring on high‐dependency wards in a hospital in Kathmandu during 2012 with a case‐fatality rate of 75%. The WGS analysis permitted the identification of two MDR K. pneumoniae lineages causing distinct outbreaks within the complex endemic K. pneumoniae. Using phylogenetic reconstruction and lineage‐specific PCR, our data predicted a scenario in which K. pneumoniae, circulating for 6 months before the outbreak, underwent a series of ward‐specific clonal expansions after the acquisition of genes facilitating virulence and MDR. We suggest that the early detection of a specific NDM‐1 containing lineage in 2011 would have alerted the high‐dependency ward staff to intervene. We argue that some form of real‐time genetic characterisation, alongside clade‐specific PCR during an outbreak, should be factored into future healthcare infection control practices in both high‐ and low‐income settings.
Introduction Klebsiella pneumoniae is one of the leading causes of hospital‐acquired infections globally. These infections (typically pneumonia, urinary tract infections, bacteraemia and wound infections) are frequently severe, notoriously affecting incapacitated [...]