Abstract

Carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAB) is a common nosocomial bacterial pathogen with limited treatment options. CRAB outbreaks are disastrous for critically ill patients. This study investigated carbapenemase-produced A. baumannii outbreaks in a tertiary hospital. Although multiple outbreaks were suggested by pulse-field gel electrophoresis, the genetic lineages and evolution between these isolates were not clear. To investigate the genomic epidemiology of these outbreaks and to reveal possible transmission routes, whole genome sequences (WGS) were compared and analyzed. From the WGS data, thirty isolates had the same sequence type (ST208); acquired resistance genes and chromosome resistant genes were detected and were responsible for multidrug resistance. A phylogenetic tree of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) compared to the earliest index isolate found that three outbreaks had emerged and disseminated simultaneously. Of these, <10 SNPs were detected within the cluster, whereas at least 600 SNPs were found between the clusters. The probable transmission routes of outbreaks were generated combined with the genetic distance of isolates and patient epidemiological data. In conclusion, WGS was a convenient and accurate monitoring method for genomic epidemiologic investigation of outbreaks, and the genomic surveillance of multidrug-resistant bacterial pathogens would be a powerful warning system for the surveillance and prevention of outbreaks.

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