Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology (Feb 2023)

Outbreak of colistin resistant, carbapenemase (blaNDM, blaOXA-232) producing Klebsiella pneumoniae causing blood stream infection among neonates at a tertiary care hospital in India

  • Ashutosh Pathak,
  • Nidhi Tejan,
  • Akanksha Dubey,
  • Radha Chauhan,
  • Nida Fatima,
  • Jyoti,
  • Sushma Singh,
  • Sahil Bhayana,
  • Chinmoy Sahu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2023.1051020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Infections caused by multi-drug resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae are a leading cause of mortality and morbidity among hospitalized patients. In neonatal intensive care units (NICU), blood stream infections by K. pneumoniae are one of the most common nosocomial infections leading to poor clinical outcomes and prolonged hospital stays. Here, we describe an outbreak of multi-drug resistant K. pneumoniae among neonates admitted at the NICU of a large tertiary care hospital in India. The outbreak involved 5 out of 7 neonates admitted in the NICU. The antibiotic sensitivity profiles revealed that all K. pneumoniae isolates were multi-drug resistant including carbapenems and colistin. The isolates belonged to three different sequence types namely, ST-11, ST-16 and ST-101. The isolates harboured carbapenemase genes, mainly blaNDM-1, blaNDM-5 and blaOXA-232 besides extended-spectrum β-lactamases however the colistin resistance gene mcr-1, mcr-2 and mcr-3 could not be detected. Extensive environmental screening of the ward and healthcare personnel led to the isolation of K. pneumoniae ST101 from filtered incubator water, harboring blaNDM-5, blaOXA-232 and ESBL genes (blaCTX-M) but was negative for the mcr genes. Strict infection control measures were applied and the outbreak was contained. This study emphasizes that early detection of such high-risk clones of multi-drug resistant isolates, surveillance and proper infection control practices are crucial to prevent outbreaks and further spread into the community.

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