Outpatient Clonal Propagation and Rapid Regional Establishment of an Emergent Carbapenem-Resistant Acinetobacter baumannnii Lineage Sequence Type 499Pas

J Infect Dis. 2023 Mar 1;227(5):631-640. doi: 10.1093/infdis/jiac427.

Abstract

Eliminating carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAb) disease requires comprehensive knowledge of how this noncommensal organism propagates among at-risk hosts. We molecularly characterized an ongoing surge of CRAb cases among patients in a Midwest US healthcare system, which coincided with sustained reductions in hospital-acquired CRAb infections and falloffs of cases associated with distinctly more resistant antibiotypes. Genome sequencing revealed surge isolates belonged to an emergent Pasteur scheme sequence type 499 and comprised multiple contemporaneous clonal clusters. Detailed query of health records revealed no consistent hospital source but instead identified various outpatient healthcare settings linked to cluster cases. We show that CRAb can rapidly establish a regional presence even without gains in breadth of antibiotic resistance and negligible contribution from sustained intrahospital transmission. As CRAb lineages may sidestep control efforts via outpatient epidemiological niches, our approach can be implemented to investigate outpatient CRAb propagation and inform subsequent local surveillance outside hospital settings.

Keywords: Acinetobacter baumannii; drug resistance; healthcare-associated infections; molecular epidemiology.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Acinetobacter Infections*
  • Acinetobacter baumannii* / genetics
  • Anti-Bacterial Agents
  • Bacterial Proteins / genetics
  • Carbapenems
  • Cross Infection* / epidemiology
  • Humans
  • Microbial Sensitivity Tests
  • Multilocus Sequence Typing
  • Outpatients
  • beta-Lactamases / genetics

Substances

  • beta-Lactamases
  • Carbapenems
  • Anti-Bacterial Agents
  • Bacterial Proteins