Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3362113 International Journal of Infectious Diseases 2015 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•First report of the hypervirulent clonal populations (ST65 and ST25) of Klebsiella pneumoniae evolving to be carbapenem-resistant.•First report of carbapenem-resistant ST11 K. pneumoniae evolving to be hypermucoviscous in China.•First report of pLVPK-related loci in ST65 and ST25 carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae.•Carbapenem-resistant hypervirulent (hypermucoviscous) K. pneumoniae isolates were nosocomially acquired and the cr-hvKP1 clone was disseminated from patient A to patient B.•Clinical and molecular characteristics of the hypervirulent (hypermucoviscous) K. pneumoniae were compared with carbapenem-resistant classic K. pneumoniae.

SummaryObjectivesTo provide the clinical and molecular characteristics of carbapenem-resistant hypervirulent (hypermucoviscous) Klebsiella pneumoniae (cr-hvKP) in a tertiary hospital in Beijing, China.MethodsThe clinical characteristics of four patients with cr-hvKP isolates and 29 patients with carbapenem-resistant classic K. pneumoniae (cr-cKP) infections were analyzed retrospectively. The molecular characteristics of cr-hvKP and cr-cKP isolates were compared.ResultsThe KPC-2 gene was detected in all cr-hvKPs except for cr-hvKP6. The cr-hvKPs belonged to three sequence types (STs; ST25, ST65, and ST11), with three pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns (I, II, and III) and two capsular serotypes (K2 and non-typeable). Although cr-hvKP1–7 did not cause invasive clinical syndromes such as community-acquired liver abscess with or without extrahepatic complications, they were all nosocomially acquired; cr-hvKP1–5 were clones disseminated between patients A and B. Compared with cr-cKPs, pLVPK-related loci, repA, iroN, and K2 capsular serotype were more prevalent in cr-hvKPs, although no significant difference was found in clinical characteristics between patients with cr-hvKP and cr-cKP infection.ConclusionsThe hypervirulent ST65 and ST25 K. pneumoniae, along with carbapenem-resistant clonal populations ST11, appear to have evolved into cr-hvKP strains. The evidence of bi-directional evolution and emergence of hospital-acquired multi-clone cr-hvKP indicates a confluence of virulence and carbapenem resistance, which might pose major problems in the management of K. pneumoniae infection.

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