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High rates of colonisation by ampicillin-resistant enterococci in residents of long-term care facilities in Porto, Portugal

Title
High rates of colonisation by ampicillin-resistant enterococci in residents of long-term care facilities in Porto, Portugal
Type
Article in International Scientific Journal
Year
2018
Authors
Freitas, AR
(Author)
Other
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Duarte, B
(Author)
Other
The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. Without AUTHENTICUS Without ORCID
Pereira, AP
(Author)
Other
The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. Without AUTHENTICUS Without ORCID
Coque, TM
(Author)
Other
The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. Without AUTHENTICUS Without ORCID
Peixe, L
(Author)
Other
The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. Without AUTHENTICUS Without ORCID
Journal
Vol. 51
Pages: 503-507
ISSN: 0924-8579
Publisher: Elsevier
Other information
Authenticus ID: P-00N-GEH
Abstract (EN): This study evaluated the occurrence of enterococci resistant to clinically relevant antibiotics in long-term care facility (LTCF) residents in Porto, Portugal, a region with high rates of multidrug-resistant enterococci in infected patients and healthy carriers. Faecal samples from 48 residents in two LTCFs (2015-2016) were enriched (with/without antibiotics) and plated on Slanetz-Bartley with/without the same antibiotics (ampicillin/vancomycin/linezolid). Two colonies per morphology/sample were selected for susceptibility testing and species identification. Clonality was established by PFGE and MLST. Genes coding for vancomycin resistance (vanA/vanB), virulence and plasmids (replicases) were searched by PCR. A total of 285 isolates were obtained, comprising Enterococcus faecalis, Enterococcus faecium, Enterococcus raffinosus and Enterococcus avium colonising 83%, 77%, 27% and 10% of residents, respectively. Residents from both LTCFs were colonised with vancomycin-resistant E. faecium (VanA-VREfm) (4 residents; 8%) and/or ampicillin-resistant (AmpR) (24 residents; 50%) E. raffinosus, E. faecium and E. avium. Enterococcus faecium previously associated with major human clonal lineages (ST18/ST78) or animal clones (ST393) were identified. Some PFGE types of E. faecium, E. raffinosus and E. avium were shared by residents of both LTCFs. Recent antibiotic exposure was significantly associated with colonisation by AmpR enterococci. Residents from Portuguese LTCFs were colonised with high rates of AmpR enterococci and similar rates of VREfm compared with other EU countries. A high colonisation rate with widespread enterococcal lineages that could be selected by antibiotic consumption in LTCFs was uncovered. These findings suggest that antimicrobial stewardship is warranted in LTCFs, which constitutes a significant challenge in a home-based setting.
Language: English
Type (Professor's evaluation): Scientific
No. of pages: 5
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