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- IRMS - Nicolae Testemitanu SUMPh
- REVISTE MEDICALE NEINSTITUȚIONALE
- One Health & Risk Management
- One Health & Risk Management 2021
- One Health & Risk Management Vol. 2 No 4, 2021 Supplement
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12710/18297
Title: | Emergence of carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae: overview of a major public health challenge |
Authors: | Burduniuc, Olga Bivol, Maria Brinza, Olga Craciun, Olga Balan, Greta |
Keywords: | Carbapenemase;Enterobacteriaceae;CPE;KPC;OXA-48;IMP;VIM- and NDM |
Issue Date: | 2021 |
Publisher: | Asociația de Biosiguranță și Biosecuritate din Republica Moldova |
Citation: | BURDUNIUC, Olga, BIVOL, Maria, BRINZA, Olga, et al. Emergence of carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae: overview of a major public health challenge. In: One Health & Risk Management. 2021, vol. 2(suppl.), no 4, p. 29. ISSN 2587-3466. |
Abstract: | Introduction. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a global public-health emergency, which
threatens the advances obtained by modern medical care during the past century. Carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (CPE) has been steadily spreading worldwide
during the last decade. CRE are often a cause of invasive infections associated with prolonged hospital stays, high treatment costs, treatment failures and high mortality, due to
delays in the administration of effective treatment and the limited availability of treatment options. The challenge of the next few years will be the race between the creation of
effective novel molecules and the spread of carbapenemases worldwide.
Material and methods. Here, in this paper we revised current research materials published in online medical databases as Medline (PubMed) and Scopus, the websites of the
WHO, CDC and focuses on bacterial resistance to carbapenems, discusses the mechanisms
by which this occurs and prevention measures.
Results. AMR has become a major source of concern for public health and infections
caused by CPE are difficult to treat. CPE represent the most serious threat, challenge of
contemporary medicine because of the number of different resistance mechanisms, concomitant resistance to all alternative antimicrobials, high mortality and the ability to
spread rapidly across worldwide. A major reason for the rapid spread of AMR through
bacterial populations is that genes conferring resistance are carried on plasmids or on
other highly movable genetic elements that are independently replicated and passed between bacterial cells and species.
The resistance of clinically isolated CRE may result either from expression of carbapenemases or by combined effects of b-lactamases with no intrinsic carbapenemase
activity and decreased outer membrane permeability.
The most clinically relevant carbapenemases encountered in Enterobacteriaceae belong
to either Ambler class A (KPC-type), or Ambler class B (metallo-beta-lactamases (MBLs)
such as IMP-, VIM- and NDM-types) or Ambler Class D (OXA-48-like enzymes).
A precise identification of carbapenemase production and type is important for the follow
up of the spread of carbapenemase producers the timely identification of outbreaks and
their prevention and the choice of treatment.
The majority of analyzed studies indicate that stronger hygiene and infection prevention
measures, hand hygiene, appropriate aseptic technique, consistent maintenance of clean,
hygienic medical facilities, equipment and practices along with surveillance, monitoring
and evaluation measures can limit the spread of CPE.
Conclusions. The emergence of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae has become a
substantial global health problem. This review highlighted that in Enterobacteriaceae, carbapenemases represent the most important mechanism of resistance, since the carbapenemase genes are mostly plasmid-encoded, associated with multi- or pan-drug resistance and are highly transferable, at least within the enterobacterial species, making
them potentially responsible for outbreaks. |
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: | One Health & Risk Management: The National Scientific Conference with international participation ”ONE HEALTH” approach in a changing world |
URI: | http://repository.usmf.md/handle/20.500.12710/18297 https://journal.ohrm.bba.md/index.php/journal-ohrm-bba-md/issue/view/17/18 |
ISSN: | 2587-3466 2587-3458 |
Appears in Collections: | One Health & Risk Management Vol. 2 No 4, 2021 Supplement
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