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      Increasing carbapenem resistance due to the clonal dissemination of oxacillinase (OXA-23 and OXA-58)-producing Acinetobacter baumannii: report from the Turkish SENTRY Program sites.

      Journal of Medical Microbiology
      Acinetobacter Infections, epidemiology, microbiology, Acinetobacter baumannii, classification, drug effects, enzymology, genetics, Anti-Bacterial Agents, pharmacology, Carbapenems, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, methods, Molecular Epidemiology, Sentinel Surveillance, Turkey, beta-Lactam Resistance, beta-Lactamases, biosynthesis

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          Abstract

          A significant increase in carbapenem-resistance rates among Acinetobacter baumannii isolates collected in two Turkish medical centres was detected in the 2000-2006 period (20-60 %) by the SENTRY Antimicrobial Surveillance Program. Carbapenem-resistant strains from 2006 were evaluated for the presence of encoding genes and epidemic clonality. OXA-58-like and OXA-23-like carbapenemase-producing strains were detected in both medical institutions. Seventeen out of 18 strains from Ankara were positive for blaOXA-58 primers and belonged to the same clone, whilst 26 isolates (25 from Istanbul and one from Ankara) harboured blaOXA-23-like genes and showed identical or similar PFGE patterns. Isolates producing OXA-23-like carbapenemases were more resistant than OXA-58-like carbapenemase producers to non-carbapenem antimicrobial agents. Carbapenem resistance in these institutions was observed to be largely driven by the dissemination of clones producing OXA-type carbapenemases.

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