Genomic Epidemiology of Complex, Multispecies, Plasmid-Borne blaKPC Carbapenemase in Enterobacterales in the United Kingdom from 2009 to 2014.

  • Stoesser, Nicole
  • Phan, Hang TT
  • Seale, Anna C
  • Aiken, Zoie
  • Thomas, Stephanie
  • Smith, Matthew
  • Wyllie, David
  • George, Ryan
  • Sebra, Robert
  • Mathers, Amy J
  • Vaughan, Alison
  • Peto, Timothy EA
  • Ellington, Matthew J
  • Hopkins, Katie L
  • Crook, Derrick W
  • Orlek, Alex
  • Welfare, William
  • Cawthorne, Julie
  • Lenney, Cheryl
  • Dodgson, Andrew
  • Woodford, Neil
  • Walker, A Sarah
  • TRACE Investigators’ Group
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Publication date
May 2020
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Language
English

Abstract

Carbapenem resistance in Enterobacterales is a public health threat. Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase (encoded by alleles of the blaKPC family) is one of the most common transmissible carbapenem resistance mechanisms worldwide. The dissemination of blaKPC historically has been associated with distinct K. pneumoniae lineages (clonal group 258 [CG258]), a particular plasmid family (pKpQIL), and a composite transposon (Tn4401). In the United Kingdom, blaKPC has represented a large-scale, persistent management challenge for some hospitals, particularly in North West England. The dissemination of blaKPC has evolved to be polyclonal and polyspecies, but the genetic mechanisms underpinning this evolution have not been elucidated in detail; this...

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