Abstract
Objectives: The objectives of this study were (i) to determine the genetic basis for carbapenem resistance
in multidrug-resistant (MDR) Acinetobacter baumannii strains isolated from patients affected by a sudden
increase in the incidence of infections by such organisms in a tertiary care hospital in Virginia, USA, in 2009–
2010 and (ii) to examine whether such strains are commonly encountered in the hospital setting.
Methods: The whole genomes of one outbreak strain as well as one carbapenem-resistant and one
carbapenem-sensitive strain from sporadic infections in 2010–2012 were sequenced and analysed.
Then, 5 outbreak isolates and 57 sporadic isolates (of which 39 were carbapenem-resistant) were
screened by PCR for relevant DNA elements identified in the genomics investigation.
Results: All three strains for which whole-genome sequences were obtained carried resistance genes
linked to MDR phenotypes and a ca. 111-kbp plasmid (pCMCVTAb1) without drug resistance genes. Of
these, the two carbapenem-resistant strains possessed a ca. 74-kbp plasmid (pCMCVTAb2) carrying a
Tn2008 transposon that provides high-level carbapenem resistance. PCR analysis showed that all of the
outbreak isolates carried both plasmids and Tn2008, and of the sporadic isolates 88% carried
pCMCVTAb1, 25% contained pCMCVTAb2 and 50% of the latter group carried Tn2008.
Conclusions: Carbapenem resistance in outbreak strains and 12% of sporadic isolates was due to the
pCMCVTAb2-borne Tn2008. This is the first report of a Tn2008-driven outbreak of carbapenem-resistant A.
baumannii infections in the Commonwealth of Virginia, which followed similar cases in Pennsylvania and Ohio.
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Rao J, Susanti D, Childress JC, Mitkos MC, Brima JK, Baffoe-Bonnie AW, Pearce SN, Grgurich D, Fernandez-Cotarelo MJ, Kerkering TM, Mukhopadhyay B. Tn2008-driven carbapenem resistance in Acinetobacter baumannii isolates from a period of increased incidence of infections in a Southwest Virginia hospital (USA). J Glob Antimicrob Resist. 2018 Mar;12:79-87. doi: 10.1016/j.jgar.2017.08.017. Epub 2017 Sep 9. PMID: 28899807.
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