Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
A total of 1,281 specimens from 1,024 patients were screened. Phylogenetic analysis classified 44 of these isolates as Klebsiella quasipneumoniae subsp. similipneumoniae (44/1,281 3.4%) and the remaining three as K. quasipneumoniae subsp. quasipneumoniae. The most common specimen source was urine (21/47 44.7%) followed by blood (14/47 29.8%). K. quasipneumoniae isolates were nonclonal. Carbapenemase-encoding genes (blaNDM and blaOXA-181) were detected in only two isolates (2/47 4.3%). K. quasipneumoniae appears to cause a spectrum of infections similar to those of K. pneumoniae, although higher rates of susceptibility to many commonly tested antimicrobials and low prevalence of virulence genes were demonstrated.
Chew et al. (Fri,) studied this question.