Efficacy of imipenem for the treatment of bacteremia due to an OXA-48-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae isolate.

Correspondence Efficacy of Imipenem for the Treatment of Bacteremia Due to an OXA-48-Producing Klebsiella pneumoniae Isolate To the Editor—Resistance to carba-penems in Enterobacteriaceae is emerging worldwide [1, 2]. The enzymes that are responsible for the resistance are mostly clavulanic acid–inhibited carba-penemase (KPC), metallo-b-lactamases (Verona integron-related metallo-b-lactamase [VIM], IMP-type carbapene-mases, New Delhi metallo-b-lactamase), and b-lactamases of the OXA-48 type [3]. The bacterial strains that produce these enzymes are multidrug-resistant [1, 3]. The efficacy of carbapenems for treating infections due to carbapenemase producers with low-level resistance or susceptibility to several carbapenem molecules remain debatable [4]. We report now a case of successful treatment with imipenem in bacteremia that was due to OXA-48-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae. A 61-year-old female was admitted in December 2010 to the intensive care unit for septic shock syndrome and acute pancreatitis. On day 12, a rectal screening swab was positive for a multidrug-resistant K. pneumoniae isolate. At 24 days after her admission, the patient was febrile (39°C). A blood culture withdrawn from a ca-theter was positive for a K. pneumoniae with the same multidrug-resistant pattern. Ertapenem (1 gram every day) was administered before the results of identification and susceptibility testing. Both isolates were found to be clonally related or identical according to pulse-field gel analysis (data not shown), and of the sequence type 101 [5]. They were resistant to ertapenem (minimum inhibitory concentration [MIC] 4 mg/L) and susceptible to imipenem (MIC 0.38 mg/L) according to results of the Etest techniques following the updated Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute guidelines [6]. They were resistant to expanded-spectrum cephalosporins (cefotaxime, ceftazidime, and ceftriaxone), fluoroquinolones, cotri-moxazole, kanamycin, gentamicin, and tobramycin. A molecular-based analysis identified a narrow-spectrum b-lactamase TEM-1, a clavulanic-acid inhibited CTX-M-15, and the carbapenemase OXA-48 using described techniques. Ertapenem was then replaced by imi-penem (1 gram every 8 hours) over 12 days. Then, all blood cultures withdrawn during the imipenem treatment tested negative for K. pneumoniae. This report underlines that laboratory detection of OXA-48 producers may be difficult. Indeed, the extended spectrum b-lactamase–producing strain isolated first from the rectal swab had not been detected as OXA-48-producing K. pneumoniae since it was susceptible to imipenem. Additional testing for ertapenem may be helpful for detecting this mechanism of resistance. In addition, this clinical case shows that certain carbapenem molecules could be used to treat infections with En-terobacteriaceae that produce OXA-48-type carbapenemases. In animal infection models, carbapenems are effective against VIM-producing K. pneumoniae with car-bapenem …

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