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Colistin-Resistant Klebsiella Infections Among Pediatric Oncology and Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation Patients in Eastern India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 November 2017

Mammen Chandy
Affiliation:
Department of Clinical Hematology, Tata Medical Center, Kolkata, India
Anirban Das
Affiliation:
Department of Pediatric Oncology, Tata Medical Center, Kolkata, India
Arpita Bhattacharyya
Affiliation:
Department of Pediatric Oncology, Tata Medical Center, Kolkata, India
Sudeep Banerjee
Affiliation:
Department of Gastro-Intestinal Surgery, Tata Medical Center, Kolkata, India
Kingshuk Dhar
Affiliation:
Department of Microbiology, Tata Medical Center, Kolkata, India.
Gaurav Goel
Affiliation:
Department of Microbiology, Tata Medical Center, Kolkata, India.
Sanjay Bhattacharya*
Affiliation:
Department of Microbiology, Tata Medical Center, Kolkata, India.
*
Address correspondence to Dr Sanjay Bhattacharya, Consultant Microbiologist, Tata Medical Center, 14 Major Arterial Road (E-W), New Town, Rajarhat, Kolkata 700 156, India (Sanjay.Bhattacharya@tmckolkata.com).
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Abstract

Type
Letters to the Editor
Copyright
© 2017 by The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America. All rights reserved 

To the Editor—The epidemiology and clinical outcome of extremely drug-resistant (XDR) gram-negative bacterial (GNB) infections in the hemato-oncologic pediatric population is not well documented. Colistin-resistant Klebsiella (CRK) is one such XDR infection; it is resistant to most classes of antibiotics except 1 or 2 classes, and it is one of the most difficult pathogens to treat. These infections are increasingly common in settings with high XDR prevalence, and they are increasing globally because of travel, movement of food items, use in livestock, and widespread use of antibiotics (in patients and food animals).Reference Bhattacharya, Goel, Mukherjee, Bhaumik and Chandy 1 Reference Nguyen, Nguyen and Nguyen 5 In the last 3 years, the trend in colistin resistance has increased among the commonly encountered GNB in our hospital (ie, for adults and pediatrics combined). From 2014 to 2016, the resistance to colistin in Klebsiella increased from 1.98% to 3.12%; in Escherichia coli, colistin resistance increased from 0.14% to 0.24%; in Pseudomonas, colistin resistance increased from 0% to 0.87%; and in Acinetobacter, colistin resistance increased from 0% to 4.49% (see the Figure online). In this retrospective study, we investigated the incidence, clinical presentation, and outcomes of CRK infection among pediatric oncology/transplantation patients (0–18 years old) in a cancer hospital in India between May 2011 and April 2017.

Over the 6-year study period, 8 pediatric patients were identified to be infected or colonized with CRK. The ratio between patients infected or colonized with colistin-sensitive Klebsiella and CRK during this period was 19 to 1. Of these 8 patients, 5 had clinically significant CRK infections and 3 were colonized with CRK detected during stool surveillance cultures (Table 1). The CRK-infected patients (4 males and 1 female) had a median age of 7.8 years (range, 4.8–12.2 years), and their median absolute neutrophil count (ANC) at the time of CRK infection was 19 cells/mm3 (range, 0–48 cells/mm3). Among the CRK-infected patients, 3 had hematological malignancy (2 with acute myeloid leukemia, 1 with acute lymphoblastic leukemia) and 2 had β-thalassemia with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Their clinical presentations included disseminated infection in 4 patients and localized infection in 1 patient. All of the patients received systemic antibiotics. Surgical intervention (ie, splenectomy and abscess drainage) was performed on 2 of these 5 patients even though they had very low ANCs, and both patients survived. Multidrug-resistant (MDR) GNB were detected in microbiological samples prior to the detection of CRK in all patients. Tigecycline, chloramphenicol, fosfomycin, and cotrimoxazole were a few antibiotics that showed in vitro susceptibility. Fosfomycin was sensitive in 3 of 5 isolates tested; chloramphenicol was sensitive in 3 of 3 isolates tested; tigecycline was intermediately susceptible in 4 of 5 isolates tested (the other being sensitive); co-trimoxazole was sensitive in 2 of 5 isolates tested; and amikacin was intermediately susceptible in 1 of 5 isolates tested (the others were resistant). The 30-day all-cause mortality from the time of microbiological confirmation of CRK infection was 40% (2 of 5 patients).

TABLE 1 Profiles of Patients Infected With Colistin-Resistant Klebsiella Infections

NOTE. yo, years old; HSCT, hematopoietic stem cell transplant; ANC, absolute neutrophil count; ESBL, extended-spectrum β-lactamases; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; RTI, response to intervention; ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; CRK, colistin-resistant Klebsiella.

Colistin-resistant Klebsiella infections are potentially fatal, and antibiotic treatment options are limited. Surgical intervention for source control is an important treatment modality wherever feasible; however, the risk of post-surgical sepsis is high in immunocompromised and neutropenic patients. In this study, all patients with CRK were found to be colonized with MDR-GNB (2 with carbapenem resistant Klebsiella, 1 with CRK, and 2 with ESBL E. coli) in other samples, including stool. This finding suggests that antibiotic-induced selection pressure could have played a part in selecting out these organisms as a cause of infection in neutropenic patients.

Unanswered questions arising from this study include mode of acquisition of these infections (community or healthcare associated). Plasmid-mediated genes for colistin resistance (mcr-1) have been identified in China (in pigs), and the possibility of horizontal spread exists. Colistin is widely used as a growth promoter in livestock farming. At least 1 of the top 10 producers of colistin for agricultural use is in India. The Center for Disease Dynamics Economics and Policy previously reported that India is one of the top consumers of agricultural antibiotics worldwide, accounting for 3% of their global consumption, and this figure is estimated to double by the year 2030.Reference Nguyen, Nguyen and Nguyen 5 Reference Liu, Wang and Walsh 7 This situation has threatened the position of colistin as 1 of the last-resort antibiotics for the treatment of carbapenem-resistant GNB infections.

The exact proportion of colistin resistance in clinical settings may be underreported. Unlike many other antibiotics, the cheaper and relatively easier disc diffusion technique cannot be used for the detection of colistin susceptibility, and the more laborious, time-consuming, and expensive broth-dilution technique must be used (Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute, Wayne, PA). In 1 such method used globally (Vitek, BioMerieux, France, communicated on May 24, 2017), the system had shown high rate of very major errors (ie, resistance was reported as sensitive). Molecular tests for the detection of colistin resistance are not easy to implement due to the higher cost, the need for infrastructure, and the multiplicity of genetic changes involved (eg, mgrB, phoP/phoQ, pmrA, pmrB, pmrC, and crrABC).Reference Pragasam, Shankar and Veeraraghavan 8

To conclude, CRK represents a new threat in the antibiotic-resistance landscape. Although our sample size was much smaller, the mortality rate seen in our CRK cohort was similar that documented in a study of Italian allogeneic stem-cell transplant recipients where the 30-day crude mortality was 24% for single-GNB bloodstream infection but reached 39% for Pseudomonas aeruginosa.Reference Mikulska, Del Bono and Raiola 9 Controlling the threat requires a multifaceted strategy involving the restriction of colistin use in the agricultural sector, prudent use in human health care, and accurate laboratory diagnosis. The inclusion of this emerging pathogen on the World Health Organization’s Priority Pathogen List may help facilitate the development of new antibiotics. 10

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We would like to thank Parijat Das, Sukdev Mukherjee, Krishnendu Das, Srabanti Bose, Rajkumar Mahto and Subhamoy Bhattacharya (laboratory technologists in Microbiology at Tata Medical Center, Kolkata, India) for the technical support.

Financial support: No financial support was provided relevant to this article.

Potential conflicts of interest: All authors report no conflicts of interest relevant to this article.

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/ice.2017.247

References

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TABLE 1 Profiles of Patients Infected With Colistin-Resistant Klebsiella Infections

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