The Antibiotic sensitivity of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in a 5-year period and investigation of clonal outbreak with PFGE

INTRODUCTION: Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, which is able to form a biofilm, has mostly been related to catheters when it is the agent in hospital infections; these infections generally present as bacteremia and pneumonia, which may progress with complications and result in death. METHODOLOGY: The s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Çalışkan, A., Çopur Çicek, A., Aydogan Ejder, N., Karagöz, A., Kirişci, Ö., Kılıç, S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: NLM (Medline) 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11499/28840
id ftpamukkaleuniv:oai:acikerisim.pau.edu.tr:11499/28840
record_format openpolar
spelling ftpamukkaleuniv:oai:acikerisim.pau.edu.tr:11499/28840 2023-05-15T16:04:56+02:00 The Antibiotic sensitivity of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in a 5-year period and investigation of clonal outbreak with PFGE Çalışkan, A. Çopur Çicek, A. Aydogan Ejder, N. Karagöz, A. Kirişci, Ö. Kılıç, S. 2019 http://hdl.handle.net/11499/28840 English eng NLM (Medline) 10.3855/jidc.11171 Journal of infection in developing countries 19722680 (ISSN) http://hdl.handle.net/11499/28840 13 7 634 639 Scopus Article 2019 ftpamukkaleuniv 2020-11-08T10:11:11Z INTRODUCTION: Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, which is able to form a biofilm, has mostly been related to catheters when it is the agent in hospital infections; these infections generally present as bacteremia and pneumonia, which may progress with complications and result in death. METHODOLOGY: The study included 153 S. maltophilia strains isolated from clinical samples sent to our hospital laboratory between 1 January 2014 and 30 June 2018. The bacteria were identified and their antibiotic sensitivity was determined using the VITEK-2 automated system. PFGE (Pulsed Field Gel Electrophoresis): The strains isolated from 34 patient clinical samples and from 1 patient bedcover were taken for PFGE examination. RESULTS: The TMP/SXT and levofloxacin sensitivity of 153 S. maltophilia strains was examined. TMP/SXT resistance was determined to be 39% and levofloxacin resistance at 5%. Among 35 S. maltophilia strains, seven genotypes were identified using the PFGE method. While three strains showed a specific genotype profile, the other 32 were determined to consist of four clusters. The cluster rate was therefore 91.4% (32/35). CONCLUSIONS: There was a clonal relationship between the vast majority of the 35 S. maltophilia isolates, which suggests that there was a cross-contamination problem in the hospital. One strain (#4) was identified by dendrogram analysis showed a high rate of similarity to the other strains and was determined to be the common source of the cross-contamination. Copyright (c) 2019 Ahemr Caliksan, Aysegul Copur Cicek, Nebahat Aydogan Ejder, Alper Karagoz, Ozlem Kirisci, Selcuk Kilic. Article in Journal/Newspaper ejder Pamukkale University Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Pamukkale University Repository
op_collection_id ftpamukkaleuniv
language English
description INTRODUCTION: Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, which is able to form a biofilm, has mostly been related to catheters when it is the agent in hospital infections; these infections generally present as bacteremia and pneumonia, which may progress with complications and result in death. METHODOLOGY: The study included 153 S. maltophilia strains isolated from clinical samples sent to our hospital laboratory between 1 January 2014 and 30 June 2018. The bacteria were identified and their antibiotic sensitivity was determined using the VITEK-2 automated system. PFGE (Pulsed Field Gel Electrophoresis): The strains isolated from 34 patient clinical samples and from 1 patient bedcover were taken for PFGE examination. RESULTS: The TMP/SXT and levofloxacin sensitivity of 153 S. maltophilia strains was examined. TMP/SXT resistance was determined to be 39% and levofloxacin resistance at 5%. Among 35 S. maltophilia strains, seven genotypes were identified using the PFGE method. While three strains showed a specific genotype profile, the other 32 were determined to consist of four clusters. The cluster rate was therefore 91.4% (32/35). CONCLUSIONS: There was a clonal relationship between the vast majority of the 35 S. maltophilia isolates, which suggests that there was a cross-contamination problem in the hospital. One strain (#4) was identified by dendrogram analysis showed a high rate of similarity to the other strains and was determined to be the common source of the cross-contamination. Copyright (c) 2019 Ahemr Caliksan, Aysegul Copur Cicek, Nebahat Aydogan Ejder, Alper Karagoz, Ozlem Kirisci, Selcuk Kilic.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Çalışkan, A.
Çopur Çicek, A.
Aydogan Ejder, N.
Karagöz, A.
Kirişci, Ö.
Kılıç, S.
spellingShingle Çalışkan, A.
Çopur Çicek, A.
Aydogan Ejder, N.
Karagöz, A.
Kirişci, Ö.
Kılıç, S.
The Antibiotic sensitivity of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in a 5-year period and investigation of clonal outbreak with PFGE
author_facet Çalışkan, A.
Çopur Çicek, A.
Aydogan Ejder, N.
Karagöz, A.
Kirişci, Ö.
Kılıç, S.
author_sort Çalışkan, A.
title The Antibiotic sensitivity of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in a 5-year period and investigation of clonal outbreak with PFGE
title_short The Antibiotic sensitivity of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in a 5-year period and investigation of clonal outbreak with PFGE
title_full The Antibiotic sensitivity of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in a 5-year period and investigation of clonal outbreak with PFGE
title_fullStr The Antibiotic sensitivity of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in a 5-year period and investigation of clonal outbreak with PFGE
title_full_unstemmed The Antibiotic sensitivity of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in a 5-year period and investigation of clonal outbreak with PFGE
title_sort antibiotic sensitivity of stenotrophomonas maltophilia in a 5-year period and investigation of clonal outbreak with pfge
publisher NLM (Medline)
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/11499/28840
genre ejder
genre_facet ejder
op_relation 10.3855/jidc.11171
Journal of infection in developing countries
19722680 (ISSN)
http://hdl.handle.net/11499/28840
13
7
634
639
Scopus
_version_ 1766400555392958464