Concordance between epidemiological evaluation of probability of transmission and whole genome sequence relatedness among hospitalized patients acquiring KPC-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae.
2020
Abstract Objectives We aimed to evaluate the concordance between epidemiologically-determined transmission and genetic linkage of KPC-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae (KPC-Kp). Methods We included consecutive KPC-Kp carriers between Dec-2016 to Apr-2017 in a hospital endemic for KPC-Kp. We assessed epidemiological relatedness between patients by prospective investigations of the infection control team. The probability of epidemiological relatedness was classified into four groups: no suspected transmission, low, moderate and high probability of transmission. Whole genome sequencing of isolates was performed. Genetic linkage between KPC-Kp isolates was expressed by distance between isolates in single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). We established a SNP cutoff defining a different strain based on the reconstructed phylogenetic tree. We compared the epidemiological and genetic linkage of all isolates from all patients. Results The study included 25 KPC-Kp carriers with 49 isolates. SNP variance was available for 1129 crossed patient-isolate pairs. Genomic linkage, based on a cutoff of 80 SNPs to define related isolates, was found in 115/708 (16.2%) of isolates with no transmission suspected epidemiologically, 27/319 (8.5%) of low, 11/26 (42.3%) of moderate and 64/76 (84.2%) of high epidemiological transmission risk determination (p Conclusions While significant concordance between epidemiological and genomic transmission patterns was found, epidemiological investigations of transmission are limited by the possibility of unidentified transmissions or over-estimation of associations. Genetic linkage analysis is an important aid to epidemiological transmission assessment.
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