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Prevalence and Antibiotic Resistance of ESKAPE Pathogens Isolated in the Emergency Department of a Tertiary Care Teaching Hospital in Hungary: A 5-Year Retrospective Survey

Authors :
Péter Hannauer
Edit Hajdú
Ria Benkő
Andrea Lázár
Gabriella Bodó
Péter Erdélyi
Mária Matuz
Zoltán Pető
Márió Gajdács
Erika Papfalvi
Source :
Antibiotics, Volume 9, Issue 9, Antibiotics, Vol 9, Iss 624, p 624 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI, 2020.

Abstract

Antibiotic treatments initiated on Emergency Departments (ED) are empirical. Therefore, knowledge of local susceptibility patterns is important. Despite this, data on expected pathogens and their resistance profile are scarce from EDs internationally. The study aim was to assess the epidemiology and resistance patterns of bacterial isolates from a tertiary-care ED over 5 years, focusing on ESKAPE bacteria (including the Enterobacterales group). After removal of duplicates, n = 6887 individual bacterial isolates were recovered, out of which n = 4974 (72.22%) were ESKAPE isolates. E. coli was the most frequent isolate (2193, 44.1%), followed by the Klebsiella genus (664<br />13.4%). The third most frequent isolate was S. aureus (561, 11.3%). In total, multi-drug resistance (MDR) was present in 23.8% and was most prevalent in A. baumanii (65.5%), P. mirabilis (42.7%), and K. pneumoniae (32.6%). MRSA was isolated in 19.6%, while ESBL-producing Enterobacterales in 17.7%, and these were associated with remarkably higher resistance to other antibacterials as well. Difficult-to-treat resistance (DTR) was detected in 0.5%. The frequent isolation of some ESKAPE bacteria and the detected considerable acquired resistance among ED patients raise concern. The revealed data identified problematic pathogens and will guide us to set up the optimal empiric antibiotic protocol for clinicians.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20796382
Volume :
9
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Antibiotics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....05a80bbaa28275d46791062f59b434cc