Emerging Infectious Diseases (May 2006)

Enterobacter cloacae Outbreak and Emergence of Quinolone Resistance Gene in Dutch Hospital

  • Armand Paauw,
  • Ad C. Fluit,
  • Jan Verhoef,
  • Maurine A. Leverstein-van Hall

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1205.050910
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
pp. 807 – 812

Abstract

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An outbreak of Enterobacter cloacae infections with variable susceptibility to fluoroquinolones occurred in the University Medical Center Utrecht in the Netherlands in 2002. Our investigation showed that a qnrA1 gene was present in 78 (94%) of 83 outbreak isolates and that a qnrA1-encoding plasmid transferred to other strains of the same species and other species. The earliest isolate carrying this same plasmid was isolated in 1999. qnrA1 was located in a complex integron consisting of the intI1, aadB, qacEΔ1, sul1, orf513, qnrA1, ampR, qacEΔ1, and sul1 genes that were not described previously. On the same plasmid, 2 other class 1 integrons were present. One was a new integron associated with the blaCTX-M-9 extended-spectrum β-lactamase.

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