The acquired resistance to the carbapenems is frequently joined to modified expression of porins or other outer membrane (OM) structures, thus bacterial adherence, that also depends on the presence of peculiar surface structures, might theoretically be influenced. In this study the ability to adhere to Hep-2 and I-407 eukaryotic cell monolayers was assayed for two susceptible strains of Serratia marcescens, one strain of Enterobacter cloacae and one of Providencia rettgeri in comparison with that of isogenic resistant mutants selected either by carbapenems or by cephalosporins. The mutants appeared slightly less adherent than the wild type strains, however, due to the high variability of this kind of assay, the differences observed in most cases could not be considered statistically significant. The data suggest that adherence, among the factors affecting the pathogenicity of the strains, remains probably unmodified in the resistant bacterial population possibly selected by a carbapenem treatment.