Emerging Infectious Diseases (Apr 2018)

Carbapenem-Nonsusceptible Acinetobacter baumannii, 8 US Metropolitan Areas, 2012–2015

  • Sandra N. Bulens,
  • Sarah H. Yi,
  • Maroya S. Walters,
  • Jesse T. Jacob,
  • Chris Bower,
  • Jessica Reno,
  • Lucy Wilson,
  • Elisabeth Vaeth,
  • Wendy Bamberg,
  • Sarah J. Janelle,
  • Ruth Lynfield,
  • Paula Snippes Vagnone,
  • Kristin Shaw,
  • Marion Kainer,
  • Daniel Muleta,
  • Jacqueline Mounsey,
  • Ghinwa Dumyati,
  • Cathleen Concannon,
  • Zintars Beldavs,
  • P. Maureen Cassidy,
  • Erin C. Phipps,
  • Nicole Kenslow,
  • Emily B. Hancock,
  • Alexander J. Kallen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2404.171461
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 4
pp. 727 – 734

Abstract

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In healthcare settings, Acinetobacter spp. bacteria commonly demonstrate antimicrobial resistance, making them a major treatment challenge. Nearly half of Acinetobacter organisms from clinical cultures in the United States are nonsusceptible to carbapenem antimicrobial drugs. During 2012–2015, we conducted laboratory- and population-based surveillance in selected metropolitan areas in Colorado, Georgia, Maryland, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Tennessee to determine the incidence of carbapenem-nonsusceptible A. baumannii cultured from urine or normally sterile sites and to describe the demographic and clinical characteristics of patients and cases. We identified 621 cases in 537 patients; crude annual incidence was 1.2 cases/100,000 persons. Among 598 cases for which complete data were available, 528 (88.3%) occurred among patients with exposure to a healthcare facility during the preceding year; 506 (84.6%) patients had an indwelling device. Although incidence was lower than for other healthcare-associated pathogens, cases were associated with substantial illness and death.

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