Antimicrobial Stewardship & Healthcare Epidemiology (Jun 2023)

Epidemiology of carbapenem-resistant and extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Enterobacterales in US children, 2016–2020

  • Heather Grome,
  • Julian Grass,
  • Nadezhda Duffy,
  • Sandra Bulens,
  • Jesse Jacob,
  • Gillian Smith,
  • Lucy Wilson,
  • Elisabeth Vaeth,
  • Bailey Evenson,
  • Ghinwa Dumyati,
  • Rebecca Tsay,
  • Erin C. Phipps,
  • Kristina Flores,
  • Christopher Wilson,
  • Christopher Czaja,
  • Helen Johnston,
  • Ruth Lynfield,
  • Sean O’Malley,
  • Meghan Maloney,
  • Nicole Stabach,
  • Joelle Nadle,
  • Alice Guh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/ash.2023.231
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3
pp. s16 – s16

Abstract

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Background: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Emerging Infections Program conducts active laboratory- and population-based surveillance for carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) and extended spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Enterobacterales (ESBL-E). To better understand the U.S. epidemiology of these organisms among children, we determined the incidence of pediatric CRE and ESBL-E cases and described their clinical characteristics. Methods: Surveillance was conducted among children 2-fold higher in infants (children <1 year) than other age groups. Among those with data available, CRE cases were more likely than ESBL-E cases to have underlying conditions (99/158 [62.7%] versus 59/169 [34.9%], P<0.0001), prior healthcare exposures (74/158 [46.8%] versus 38/169 [22.5%], P<0.0001), and be hospitalized for any reason around time of their culture collection (75/158 [47.5%] versus 38/169 [22.5%], P<0.0001); median duration of admission was 18 days [IQR 3–103] for CRE versus 10 days [IQR 4–43] for ESBL-E. Urinary tract infection was the most frequent infection for CRE (89/158 [56.3%]) and ESBL-E (125/169 [74.0%]) cases. Conclusion: CRE infections occurred less frequently than ESBL-infections in U.S. children but were more often associated with healthcare risk factors and hospitalization. Infants had highest incidence of CRE and ESBL-E. Continued surveillance, infection prevention and control efforts, and antibiotic stewardship outside and within pediatric care are needed