Emergence of carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii in hospitals in Pakistan (original) (raw)

2014, Journal of Medical Microbiology

The emergence of pan-resistance in bacterial pathogens poses a threat to human health. Carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii has emerged as a serious challenge, causing nosocomial infection and community-acquired outbreaks in hospitals globally, including in Pakistan. We collected 90 Acinetobacter isolates from patients with secondary or nosocomial infections from different hospitals in Pakistan and screened for carbapenem-resistant strains. Of the 90 isolates, 59 were resistant to carbapenems. Among oxacillinase -encoding genes, bla OXA-51like was common in all isolates, including in combination with bla OXA-23 -like in 14 isolates; however, bla OXA-24 -like and bla OXA-58 -like were completely absent. Among metallo-b-lactamase-encoding genes, only bla NDM-1 was found in one isolate, while the other three genes, bla IMP , bla VIM and bla SIM, were completely absent. None of the isolates was found to harbour the bla CTX-M gene. The isolates were also tested for susceptibilities to a panel of different antibiotics belonging to several classes. Of all the drugs tested, tigecycline was the most effective with 80 % sensitivity amongst isolates, followed by colistin with 50 % sensitivity. Three categories of resistance were found in these isolates: extreme drug resistance in 26, pan-drug resistance in 19 and multidrug resistance in 87 isolates. The isolates exhibited a high resistance to cephalosporins, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole and b-lactam antibiotics, followed by tetracycline and b-lactam/b-lactam inhibitor combination, fluoroquinolone and aminoglycosides. The results show a prominent level of antibiotic-resistance phenotypes in A. baumannii and strongly suggest the need for full-scale national surveillance of carbapenem-resistant A. baumannii with particular emphasis on the newly identified NDM-1 (New Delhi metallo-b-lactamase-1).