Abstract

BackgroundEnvironmental and clinical carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAb) isolated in a hospital of the Eastern Region of Saudi Arabia were compared to assess the potential environmental contamination by this pathogen. MethodsFrequent-hand-touch surfaces of intensive care (ICU), medical (MW), and surgical (SW) units were randomly sampled for a month-long period, and the CRAb identified were compared to clinical isolates of the same period by PFGE and blaOXA-51-like gene sequencing. Carbapenemase and ribosomal methylase genes, ISAba1 link to blaOXA51-like or to blaOXA-23, respectively were detected by PCR. ResultsCRAb was identified from 35.5% of surfaces. All environmental and clinical isolates were multi- or extremely drug resistant. PFGE of all clinical (n=21) and selected environmental (n=30) isolates identified a singleton and four clusters, all of which included both clinical and environmental isolates. In the two largest clusters isolates carried blaOXA-66, ISAba1-linked blaOXA-23, and were from the ICU, MW and the male SW. Isolates of the female SW carried blaOXA-69, ISAba1-linked blaOXA-23 and blaGES-11. A pair of clinical and environmental CRAb from the Male SW harboured blaNDM-1 in addition to ISAba1-linked blaOXA-94. ConclusionA worrying level of environmental contamination, often by CRAb belonging to international clones, was revealed, highlighting the importance of environmental hygiene.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call