Antibiotics (Jan 2021)

The Role of Uniform Meropenem Usage in <i>Acinetobacter baumannii</i> Clone Replacement

  • Bence Balázs,
  • Zoltán Tóth,
  • Fruzsina Nagy,
  • Renátó Kovács,
  • Hajnalka Tóth,
  • József Bálint Nagy,
  • Ákos Tóth,
  • Krisztina Szarka,
  • László Majoros,
  • Gábor Kardos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10020127
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
p. 127

Abstract

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The dominant carbapenem resistant Acinetobacter baumannii harboring blaOXA-23-like carbapenemase was replaced by blaOXA-40-like carriers in a Hungarian tertiary-care center with high meropenem but relatively low imipenem use. We hypothesized that alterations in antibiotic consumption may have contributed to this switch. Our workgroup previous study examined the relation between resistance spiral and the antibiotic consumption, and the results suggest that the antibiotic usage provoked the increasing resistance in case of A. baumannii. We aimed at measuring the activity of imipenem and meropenem to compare the selection pressure exerted by the different carbapenems in time-kill assays. Strain replacement was confirmed by whole genome sequencing, core-genome multilocus sequence typing (cgMLST), and resistome analysis. Based on results of the time-kill assays, we found a significant difference between two different sequence-types (STs) in case of meropenem, but not in case of imipenem susceptibility. The newly emerged ST636 and ST492 had increased resistance level against meropenem compared to the previously dominant ST2 and ST49. On the other hand, the imipenem and colistin resistance profiles were similar. These results suggest, that the uniform meropenem usage may have contributed to A. baumannii strain replacement in our setting.

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