Characterization of presumptive vancomycin-resistant enterococci recovered during infection control surveillance in Dallas, Texas

2020 
Enterococcus faecalis and E. faecium are Gram-positive bacteria that normally inhabit the human gastrointestinal tract. They are also opportunistic pathogens and can cause nosocomial infection outbreaks. To prevent the spread of nosocomial infections, hospitals may rely on screening methods to identify patients colonized with multidrug-resistant organisms including vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE). Spectra VRE agar (Remel) contains vancomycin and other medium components that select for VRE and phenotypically differentiate between faecalis and faecium species by colony color. We obtained 66 de-identified rectal swab cultures on Spectra VRE agar that were obtained during routine patient admission surveillance at a Dallas, Texas hospital. We analyzed 90 presumptive VRE from 61 of the Spectra VRE agar cultures using molecular and culture methods. Using ddl typing, 55 were found to be E. faecium and 32 were found to be E. faecalis. While most of the E. faecium were positive for the vanA gene by PCR (52 of 55 strains), few of the E. faecalis were positive for either vanA or vanB (5 of 32 strains). The 27 E. faecalis vanA- and vanB-negative strains could not be recultured on Spectra VRE agar. Overall, we found that Spectra VRE agar performed robustly for the identification of vancomycin-resistant E. faecium, but presumptive false positives were obtained for vancomycin-resistant E. faecalis.
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