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Background. Studies about transmission rates of extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL)–producing Entero-bacteriaceae in hospitals and households are scarce. Methods. Eighty-two index patients with new carriage of ESBL-producing Escherichia coli (ESBL-Ec; n = 72) or ESBL-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae (ESBL-Kp; n = 10) and their hospital (n = 112) and household (n = 96) contacts were studied prospectively from May 2008 through September 2010. Isolates were phenotypically and molecularly characterized (sequencing of bla genes, repetitive extragenic palindromic polymerase chain reaction, pulse-field gel electrophoresis, and multilocus sequence typing). Transmission was defined as carriage of a clonally-related ESBL producer with identical blaESBL gene(s) in the index patient and his or her contact(s). Results. CTX-M-15 was the most prevalent ESBL in ESBL-Ec (58%) and ESBL-Kp (70%) in the index patients. Twenty (28%) ESBL-Ec isolates were of the hyperepidemic clone ST131. In the hospital, transmission rates were 4.5% (ESBL-Ec) and 8.3 % (ESBL-Kp) and the incidences of transmissions were 5.6 (Ec) and 13.9 (Kp) per 1000 exposure days, respectively. Incidence of ESBL-Kp hospital transmission was significantly higher than that of ESBL-Ec (P .0001), despite implementation of infection control measures in 75 % of ESBL-Kp index patients but only 22 % of ESBL-Ec index patients. Detection of ESBL producers not linked to an index patient was as frequent (ESBL-Ec, 5.7%; ESBL-Kp, 16.7%) as nosocomial transmission events. In households, transmission rates were 23 % for ESBL-Ec and 25 % for ESBL-Kp.
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Markus Hilty
University of Bern
Belinda Y. Betsch
University Hospital of Bern
Katja Bögli‐Stuber
Swissmedic
Clinical Infectious Diseases
University of Bern
University Hospital of Bern
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Hilty et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dff6e02833447a7e255945 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/cis581