The Role of Epidemic Resistance Plasmids and International High-Risk Clones in the Spread of Multidrug-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae
University of Virginia · University of Calgary · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Escherichia coli sequence type 131 (ST131) and Klebsiella pneumoniae ST258 emerged in the 2000s as important human pathogens, have spread extensively throughout the world, and are responsible for the rapid increase in antimicrobial resistance among E. coli and K. pneumoniae strains, respectively. E. coli ST131 causes extraintestinal infections and is often fluoroquinolone resistant and associated with extended-spectrum β-lactamase production, especially CTX-M-15. K. pneumoniae ST258 causes urinary and respiratory tract infections and is associated with carbapenemases, most often KPC-2 and KPC-3. The most prevalent lineage within ST131 is named fimH30 because it contains the H30 variant of the type 1 fimbrial…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.64
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 209
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Klebsiella pneumoniae
- Microbiology
- Plasmid
- Lineage (genetic)
- Escherichia coli
- clone (Java method)
- Biology
- Multiple drug resistance
- Good health and well-being