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Volume 25, Number 7—July 2019
Dispatch

Carbapenem and Cephalosporin Resistance among Enterobacteriaceae in Healthcare-Associated Infections, California, USA1

Kyle RizzoComments to Author , Sam Horwich-Scholefield, and Erin Epson
Author affiliations: California Department of Public Health, Richmond, California, USA.

Main Article

Table 1

Carbapenem and cephalosporin resistance among Enterobacteriaceae reported in healthcare-associated infections by California hospitals, 2014–2017*

Antimicrobial agent 2014
2015
2016
2017
Change
No. (%) isolates† % R No. (%) isolates† % R No. (%) isolates† % R No. (%) isolates† % R Risk ratio (95% CI) p value
Enterobacteriaceae
Carbapenems 2,747 (60.2) 3.1 3,310 (64.2) 3.1 3,409 (64.2) 3.5 3,247 (65.1) 3.0 1.00
(0.92–1.09) 0.98
Cephalosporins 3,303 (74.3) 24.0 3,837 (76.2) 27.7 4,020 (77.4) 27.5 3,885 (79.6) 28.0 1.04
(1.02–1.07) 0.001
DTR 2,298 (50.0) 2.2 2,786 (53.5) 2.0 2,916 (54.5) 2.1 2,856 (56.6) 1.6 0.92
(0.81–1.04) 0.16
MDR
4,500 (98.0)
38.8

5,129 (98.5)
43.3

5,228 (97.6)
43.8

4,942 (97.9)
44.0

1.04
(1.02–1.05)
<0.001
Escherichia coli
Carbapenems 1,623 (59.9) 0.7 1,969 (64.9) 0.7 1,969 (64.6) 1.1 1,893 (66.7) 1.2 1.24
(1.00–1.56) 0.05
Cephalosporins 1,890 (71.1) 22.9 2,158 (72.4) 28.0 2,229 (74.2) 27.1 2,147 (76.8) 29.7 1.07
(1.04–1.11) <0.001
DTR 1,323 (48.6) 0.5 1,577 (51.7) 0.3 1,615 (52.7) 0.5 1,613 (56.3) 0.4 0.99
(0.69–1.42) 0.95
MDR
2,669 (98.0)
42.8

3,004 (98.4)
47.0

2,998 (97.8)
47.1

2,812 (98.2)
49.2

1.04
(1.02–1.06)
<0.001
Enterobacter spp.
Carbapenems 489 (62.1) 3.7 550 (62.9) 6.9 602 (63.7) 5.2 559 (63.0) 5.4 1.06
(0.90–1.24) 0.51
Cephalosporins 701 (94.1) 29.8 786 (94.5) 30.9 855 (94.9) 33.6 811 (94.5) 30.8 1.02
(0.97–1.07) 0.47
DTR 488 (60.6) 0.2 554 (61.8) 0.5 608 (63.1) 0.5 564 (61.2) 0 0.79
(0.38–1.57) 0.50
MDR
789 (98.0)
43.5

883 (98.5)
53.0

940 (97.5)
55.6

897 (97.3)
50.3

1.04
(1.01–1.07)
0.01
Klebsiella spp.
Carbapenems 635 (59.7) 8.8 791 (63.2) 6.6 838 (63.8) 7.9 795 (63.3) 5.7 0.90
(0.80–1.01) 0.07
Cephalosporins 712 (68.3) 21.4 893 (73.1) 24.2 936 (72.6) 22.8 927 (75.5) 21.5 0.99
(0.94–1.05) 0.76
DTR 487 (45.7) 8.8 655 (52.1) 7.2 693 (52.4) 7.2 679 (53.8) 5.7 0.88
(0.77–1.00) 0.06
MDR 1,042 (97.8) 25.1 1,242 (98.7) 27.7 1,290 (97.5) 27.2 1,233 (97.7) 27.8 1.03
(0.99–1.07) 0.21

*Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae were resistant to imipenem, meropenem, doripenem, or ertapenem. Enterobacteriaceae resistant to ceftriaxone, ceftazidime, cefepime, or cefotaxime were cephalosporin-resistant. MDR Enterobacteriaceae were nonsusceptible to >3 antimicrobial categories; XDR Enterobacteriaceae were nonsusceptible to all but 1 or 2 antimicrobial categories and pandrug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae were nonsusceptible to all antimicrobial categories (n = 15). DTR Enterobacteriaceae were intermediate or resistant to all reported agents within carbapenem, cephalosporin, and fluoroquinolone categories, as well as piperacillin-tazobactam and aztreonam when results were available. DTR, difficult-to-treat; MDR, multidrug-resistant; % R, percentage resistant.
†The number and percentage of Enterobacteriaceae with antimicrobial susceptibility test results as a proportion of the overall number reported (i.e., with or without antimicrobial susceptibility test results).

Main Article

1Preliminary data from this analysis were presented in a poster at IDWeek 2018 in San Francisco, California, USA, October 5, 2018.

Page created: July 08, 2019
Page updated: July 08, 2019
Page reviewed: July 08, 2019
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
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