Abstract
The aim of the study was to characterize the genetic basis of beta-lactam resistance developed in clinical isolates of Klebsiella pneumoniae after exposure to cefuroxime. Clinical features of two episodes of liver abscess caused by K. pneumoniae in a diabetic patient were reported. Four isolates (KP(1)/KP(2) and KP(3)/KP(4)) of K. pneumoniae were recovered from cultures of blood/pus in the first and second episodes, respectively. Laboratory investigation of the K. pneumoniae isolates included genotyping by PFGE, resistance gene analysis by PCR amplification and DNA sequencing, and outer membrane protein analysis by SDS-PAGE. KP(3) and KP(4) were recovered after a 21 day cefuroxime therapy and demonstrated identical genotypes to that of KP(1) and KP(2). However, compared with KP(1) and KP(2), emerging resistance to piperacillin, cefalotin, cefuroxime and cefoxitin was observed. The other antibiotics tested, except ampicillin, retained the same effectiveness against the four isolates, although increases (4- to 8-fold) in the MICs of cefotaxime, ceftriaxone, ceftazidime, cefepime, flomoxef and aztreonam were observed in KP(3) and KP(4). None of the isolates produced extended-spectrum beta-lactamases or plasmid-mediated AmpC beta-lactamases. Deficiency in the expression of an outer membrane protein (OmpK35) was observed in the cefuroxime-resistant isolates, KP(3) and KP(4). The increased resistance to cephalosporins in these clinical isolates of K. pneumoniae after exposure to cefuroxime might be related to the loss of OmpK35.
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