Genomic surveillance, characterisation and intervention of a carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii outbreak in critical care

2020 
Infections caused by carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CR-Ab) have become increasingly prevalent in clinical settings and often result in significant morbidity and mortality due to their multidrug resistance (MDR). Here we present an integrated whole genome sequencing (WGS) response to a polymicrobial outbreak in a Brisbane hospital between 2016-2018. 28 CR-Ab (and 21 other MDR Gram negative bacilli) were collected from Intensive Care Unit and Burns Unit patients and sent for WGS with a 7-day turn-around-time in clinical reporting. All CR-Ab were sequence type (ST)1050 and within 10 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) apart, indicative of an ongoing outbreak, and distinct from historical CR-Ab isolates from the same hospital. Possible transmission routes between patients were identified on the basis of CR-Ab and K. pneumoniae SNP profiles. Continued WGS surveillance between 2016 to 2018 enabled suspected outbreak cases to be refuted, but a resurgence of the outbreak CR-Ab mid-2018 in the Burns Unit prompted additional screening. Environmental metagenomic sequencing identified the hospital plumbing as a potential source. Replacement of the plumbing and routine drain maintenance resulted in rapid resolution of the secondary outbreak and significant risk reduction with no discernable transmission in the Burns Unit since. Here we demonstrate implementation of a comprehensive WGS and metagenomics investigation that resolved a persistent CR-Ab outbreak in a critical care setting.
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