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Anatomy of an extensively drug-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae outbreak in Tuscany, Italy

Authors :
Patrick McGann
Yoon I. Kwak
Ulrike MacDonald
Maria Grazia Cusi
Melissa J. Martin
Jason Stam
Francois Lebreton
Casey Harless
Giacinta Tordini
Emma G. Mills
Jean Denis Docquier
Stefania Cresti
Lindsey R. Hall
Karsten Becker
Rosslyn Maybank
Brendan W. Corey
Brendan T. Jones
Thomas A. Russo
Filomena Sannio
Jason W. Bennett
Katharina Schaufler
Marcello Valassina
Nils-Olaf Hübner
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Significance Carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae belongs to the “critical-priority” tier of bacterial pathogens as identified by the World Health Organization. Emerging “high-risk” lineages are responsible for difficult-to-treat, hospital-acquired infections and outbreaks around the globe. By integrating genomic and epidemiological data for isolates collected over 20 mo, this study revealed both the high, regional prevalence and the rapid spread, within a single hospital, of K. pneumoniae ST-147 in Italy. Besides resistance to nearly all antibiotics, this lineage carried a hybrid plasmid harboring a set of biomarker genes previously linked to hypervirulence. Convergence of resistance and virulence determinants is a major concern and these findings highlight the need for robust, global surveillance to monitor the emergence of high-risk K. pneumoniae.<br />A protracted outbreak of New Delhi metallo-β-lactamase (NDM)–producing carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae started in Tuscany, Italy, in November 2018 and continued in 2020 and through 2021. To understand the regional emergence and transmission dynamics over time, we collected and sequenced the genomes of 117 extensively drug-resistant, NDM-producing K. pneumoniae isolates cultured over a 20-mo period from 76 patients at several healthcare facilities in southeast Tuscany. All isolates belonged to high-risk clone ST-147 and were typically nonsusceptible to all first-line antibiotics. Albeit sporadic, resistances to colistin, tigecycline, and fosfomycin were also observed as a result of repeated, independent mutations. Genomic analysis revealed that ST-147 isolates circulating in Tuscany were monophyletic and highly genetically related (including a network of 42 patients from the same hospital and sharing nearly identical isolates), and shared a recent ancestor with clinical isolates from the Middle East. While the blaNDM-1 gene was carried by an IncFIB-type plasmid, our investigations revealed that the ST-147 lineage from Italy also acquired a hybrid IncFIB/IncHIB–type plasmid carrying the 16S methyltransferase armA gene as well as key virulence biomarkers often found in hypervirulent isolates. This plasmid shared extensive homologies with mosaic plasmids circulating globally including from ST-11 and ST-307 convergent lineages. Phenotypically, the carriage of this hybrid plasmid resulted in increased siderophore production but did not confer virulence to the level of an archetypical, hypervirulent K. pneumoniae in a subcutaneous model of infection with immunocompetent CD1 mice. Our findings highlight the importance of performing genomic surveillance to identify emerging threats.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b377839e5d79aa43c77a1fe92bfae13a