Abstract

Highly resistant microorganisms (HRMOs) may evade screening strategies used in routine diagnostics. Bacteria that have evolved to evade diagnostic tests may have a selective advantage in the nosocomial environment. Evasion of resistance detection can result from the following mechanisms: low-level expression of resistance genes not resulting in detectable resistance, slow growing variants, mimicry of wild-type-resistance, and resistance mechanisms that are only detected if induced by antibiotic pressure. We reviewed reports on hospital outbreaks in the Netherlands over the past 5 years. Remarkably, many outbreaks including major nation-wide outbreaks were caused by microorganisms able to evade resistance detection by diagnostic screening tests. We describe various examples of diagnostic evasion by several HRMOs and discuss this in a broad and international perspective. The epidemiology of hospital-associated bacteria may strongly be affected by diagnostic screening strategies. This may result in an increasing reservoir of resistance genes in hospital populations that is unnoticed. The resistance elements may horizontally transfer to hosts with systems for high-level expression, resulting in a clinically significant resistance problem. We advise to communicate the identification of HRMOs that evade diagnostics within national and regional networks. Such signaling networks may prevent inter-hospital outbreaks, and allow collaborative development of adapted diagnostic tests.

Highlights

  • Diagnostic screening provides hospitals a level of immunity to antibiotic resistance

  • When highly resistant microorganisms (HRMOs) are detected, transmission can be limited by treating the patient with isolation precautions

  • The carriage of HRMOs can be suppressed by antibiotic treatment or, in case of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), even be eradicated

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Diagnostic screening provides hospitals a level of immunity to antibiotic resistance. The Dutch situation is very proficient to observe effects of diagnostic screening on the characteristics of HRMOs that cause nosocomial outbreaks. Nosocomial outbreaks with HRMO are reported to “Hospital Acquired Infection and Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring Group”, and the reports are communicated to clinical microbiologists. We searched these reports for outbreaks with micro-organisms harboring resistance mechanisms that were able to evade detection by routine diagnostics. We here present the most explicit examples of CPE, VRE, ESBLproducing bacteria and MRSA outbreaks caused by isolates harboring diagnostic-evasive resistance mechanisms

Diagnostic Evasion by CPE
Diagnostic Evasion by VRE
Diagnostic Evasion by MRSA
Diagnostic Evasion by ESBL
Findings
IMPLICATIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS
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