Replacement of Enterococcus faecalis by Enterococcus faecium as the predominant enterococcus in UK bacteraemias

Author:

Horner Carolyne1,Mushtaq Shazad2,Allen Michael13,Hope Russell2ORCID,Gerver Sarah2,Longshaw Christopher14,Reynolds Rosy5,Woodford Neil2,Livermore David M6

Affiliation:

1. British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, Birmingham, UK

2. UK Health Security Agency, London, UK

3. Merck Sharp & Dohme (UK) Limited, London, UK

4. Shionogi B.V., London, UK

5. Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK

6. Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK

Abstract

Abstract Objectives To review temporal changes in the proportions of different Enterococcus species recorded in two UK bacteraemia surveillance systems. Antibiotic resistance trends were also considered. Methods We reviewed data for enterococci from 2001 to 2019 in: (a) the BSAC Resistance Surveillance Programme, which collected up to 7–10 bloodstream enterococci every year from each of 23–39 hospitals in the UK and Ireland and tested these centrally; and (b) PHE bacteraemia surveillance, using routine results from NHS microbiology laboratories in England. Results BSAC surveillance, based upon 206–255 enterococci each year (4486 in total), indicated that the proportion of Enterococcus faecium rose from 31% (212/692) in the period 2001–3 to 51% (354/696) in the period 2017–19, balanced by corresponding falls in the proportion of Enterococcus faecalis. PHE surveillance provided a larger dataset, with >5000 enterococcus reports per year; although its identifications are less precise, it too indicated a rise in the proportion of E. faecium. BSAC surveillance for E. faecium indicated no consistent trends in resistance to ampicillin (≥86% in all years), vancomycin (annual rates 19%–40%) or high-level resistance to gentamicin (31%–59%). Resistance to vancomycin remained <4% in E. faecalis in all years, whilst high-level resistance to gentamicin fell, perhaps partly reflecting the decline of two initially prevalent gentamicin- and ciprofloxacin-resistant clones. Conclusions Both surveillance systems indicate a growing proportion of E. faecium in enterococcal bloodstream infections. This is important because fewer therapeutic options remain against this frequently multiresistant species than against E. faecalis.

Funder

BSAC

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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