Background/purpose: Currently, tigecycline-nonsusceptible Klebsiella pneumoniae (TNSKP) is mainly reported to emerge following clinical use of tigecycline and is usually polyclonal. This study aimed to characterize TNSKP isolated from patients without prior tigecycline use.
Methods: Twenty-six TNSKP clinical isolates were collected, and carbapenemase and 16S rRNA methylase genes were identified by polymerase chain reaction and sequencing. Molecular typing was conducted by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and multilocus sequence typing (MLST). Clinical data of patients in the carbapenem-susceptible TNSKP group and the tigecycline- and carbapenem-nonsusceptible K. pneumoniae (TCNSKP) group were compared.
Results: Of the 26 TNSKP isolates, eight contained both blaKPC-2 and 16S rRNA methylase genes. In the remaining 18 TNSKP isolates, no carbapenemase gene was detected, and only three had the 16S rRNA methylase gene. Among the 26 isolates, 24 distinct pulsotypes and 19 sequence types (STs) were identified by PFGE and MLST, respectively. Six of the eight TCNSKP were ST11, whereas the remaining 18 TNSKP isolates were assigned to 17 different STs. No patient received tigecycline prior to the isolation of TNSKP. By comparison, intensive care unit exposure, mechanical ventilation, prior β-lactam/β-lactamase use, and longer hospitalization were more common for the TCNSKP group than for the carbapenem-susceptible TNSKP group.
Conclusion: TNSKP can occur without tigecycline use, and TCNSKP ST11 is predominant among them. Further, this report proposes potential risk factors for the occurrence of carbapenem-nonsusceptibility in TNSKP.
Keywords: Klebsiella pneumoniae; carbapenem resistance; risk factors; tigecycline resistance.
Copyright © 2015. Published by Elsevier B.V.