Duration of hospitalization increases the risk for long-term carriage of linezolid-resistant enterococci in critically ill patients
Vera Rauschenberger, Heike Claus, Charlotte Polzin, Vera Blaschke, Stefanie Kampmeier

TL;DR
Longer hospital stays increase the risk of carrying linezolid-resistant enterococci for extended periods in critically ill patients.
Contribution
The study identifies hospitalization duration as a key risk factor for long-term carriage of linezolid-resistant enterococci.
Findings
Long-term carriage of linezolid-resistant enterococci was found in 15% of patients.
Hospitalization duration was significantly longer in patients with persistent linezolid-resistant enterococci.
Transmission events were rare, with high genetic diversity observed among strains.
Abstract
Enterococci are gut commensal microorganisms, which can however cause life-threatening infections especially in patients suffering from intestinal barrier disorders. Treatment of these enterococcal infections is challenging due to a variety of intrinsic and acquired antibiotic resistances. In this context, linezolid is applied as last-resort antibiotic. Our study aimed at determining linezolid-resistant enterococci (LRE) long-term carriage (≥ 10 weeks), since this is a risk factor for the development of LRE infection. In a one-year cohort study, all patients on hemato-oncology, intensive and intermediate care units were screened for LRE. To determine the molecular epidemiology, all detected LRE isolates were subjected to whole genome sequencing-based typing to investigate whether in-host selection or pathogen transmission was causative for LRE occurrence. Clinical and demographic data…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAntimicrobial Resistance in Staphylococcus · Bacterial Identification and Susceptibility Testing · Clostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research
