Nationwide, population-based observational study of the molecular epidemiology and temporal trend of carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales in Norway, 2015 to 2021
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31222Date
2023-07-06Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Ljungquist, Oskar; Haldorsen, Bjørg; Pöntinen, Anna Kaarina; Janice, Jessin; Josefsen, Ellen Haldis; Elstrøm, Petter; Kacelnik, Oliver; Sundsfjord, Arnfinn; Samuelsen, Ørjan; Handal, Nina; Ranheim, Trond Egil; Hansen, Bent-Are; Mjøen, Andreas Fossum; Lindemann, Paul Christoffer; Nilsen, Einar; Zaragkoulias, Kyriakos; Larsen, Hege Elisabeth; Bjørnholt, Jørgen; Gammelsrud, Karianne Wiger; Jakovljev, Aleksandra; Löhr, Iren Høyland; Bredberg, Anders; Marvik, Åshild; Minge, Christina; Tofteland, Ståle; Papp, Kristina; Onken, Annette; Weme, Einar Tollaksen; Guennigsman, Brian AlbertAbstract
National and regional carbapenemaseproducing Enterobacterales (CPE) surveillance is
essential to understand the burden of antimicrobial
resistance, elucidate outbreaks, and develop infection-control or antimicrobial-treatment recommendations. Aim: This study aimed to describe CPE and their
epidemiology in Norway from 2015 to 2021. Methods:
A nationwide, population-based observational study
of all verified clinical and carriage CPE isolates submitted to the national reference laboratory was conducted. Isolates were characterised by antimicrobial
susceptibility testing, whole genome sequencing
(WGS) and basic metadata. Annual CPE incidences
were also estimated. Results: A total of 389 CPE isolates were identified from 332 patients of 63years
median age (range:0–98). These corresponded to
341 cases, 184 (54%) being male. Between 2015 and
2021, the annual incidence of CPE cases increased
from 0.6 to 1.1per 100,000person-years. For CPEisolates with available data on colonisation/infection,
58% (226/389)were associated with colonisation and
38% (149/389) with clinical infections. WGS revealed
a predominance of OXA-48-like (51%; 198/389) and
NDM (34%; 134/389) carbapenemases in a diversified
population of Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae, including high-risk clones also detected globally.
Most CPE isolates were travel-related (63%;245/389).
Although local outbreaks and healthcare-associated
transmission occurred, no interregional spread was
detected. Nevertheless, 18% (70/389) of isolates not
directly related to import points towards potentially
unidentified transmission routes. A decline in travelassociated cases was observed during the COVID-19
pandemic. Conclusions: The close-to-doubling of CPE
case incidence between 2015 and 2021 was associated
with foreign travel and genomic diversity. To limit further transmission and outbreaks, continued screening
and monitoring is essential.
Publisher
European Centre for Disease Prevention and ControlCitation
Ljungquist, Haldorsen, Pöntinen, Janice, Josefsen, Elstrøm, Kacelnik, Sundsfjord, Samuelsen, Handal, Ranheim, Hansen, Mjøen, Lindemann, Nilsen, Zaragkoulias, Larsen, Bjørnholt, Gammelsrud, Jakovljev, Löhr, Bredberg, Marvik, Minge, Tofteland, Papp, Onken, Weme, Guennigsman. Nationwide, population-based observational study of the molecular epidemiology and temporal trend of carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales in Norway, 2015 to 2021. Eurosurveillance. 2023;28(27):1-11Metadata
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