| Title |
Fecal carriage of vancomycin-resistant enterococci in hospitalized patients and those living in the community in The Netherlands |
| Published in |
Journal of Clinical Microbiology. ISSN 0095-1137. |
| Author |
Endtz, H.P. (Hubert); Buiting, A.G.M. (Anton); Verbrugh, H.A. (Henri); Duin, van A.; Braak, van den N.P.W.C.J. (Nicole); Belkum, van A.F. (Alex); Kluytmans, J.A.J.W.; Koeleman, J.G.; Spanjaard, L. (Lodewijk); Voss, A. (Andreas); Weersink, A.J.; Vandenbroucke-Grauls, C.M.J.E. (Christina) |
| Date |
1997-01-01 |
| Language |
English |
| Type |
article |
| Abstract |
In order to determine the prevalence of vancomycin-resistant enterococci
(VRE) in The Netherlands, 624 hospitalized patients from intensive care
units or hemato-oncology wards in nine hospitals and 200 patients living
in the community were screened for VRE colonization. Enterococci were
found in 49% of the hospitalized patients and in 80% of the patients
living in the community. Of these strains, 43 and 32%, respectively, were
Enterococcus faecium. VRE were isolated from 12 of 624 (2%) and 4 of 200
(2%) hospitalized patients and patients living in the community,
respectively. PCR analysis of these 16 strains and 11 additional clinical
VRE isolates from one of the participating hospitals revealed 24 vanA
gene-containing, 1 vanB gene-containing, and 2 vanC1 gene-containing
strains. All strains were cross-resistant to avoparcin but were sensitive
to the novel glycopeptide antibiotic LY333328. Genotyping of the strains
by arbitrarily primed PCR and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis revealed a
high degree of genetic heterogeneity. This underscores a lack of
hospital-driven endemicity of VRE clones. It is suggested that the VRE in
hospitalized patients have originated from unknown sources in the
community. |
| Publication |
http://hdl.handle.net/1765/8738 |
| Persistent Identifier |
urn:NBN:nl:ui:15-1765/8738 |
| Metadata |
XML |
| Repository |
Erasmus University Rotterdam |