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Australian Group on Antimicrobial Resistance (AGAR) Australian Gram-negative Surveillance Outcome Program (GnSOP) Bloodstream Infection Annual Report 2024
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Australian Group on Antimicrobial Resistance (AGAR) Australian Gram-negative Surveillance Outcome Program (GnSOP) Bloodstream Infection Annual Report 2024

Jan Bell, Alicia Fajardo Lubian, Sally Partridge, Thomas Gottlieb, Jennifer Robson, Jonathan Iredell, Denise Daley and Geoffrey Coombs
Communicable diseases intelligence (2018), Vol.49
2025
PMID: 41248467
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Published (Version of Record)CC BY-NC-ND V4.0 Open Access

Abstract

Australian Group on Antimicrobial Resistance (AGAR) antimicrobial resistance bacteraemia gram-negative Escherichia coli Enterobacter Klebsiella
The Australian Group on Antimicrobial Resistance (AGAR) performs regular period-prevalence studies to monitor changes in antimicrobial resistance in selected enteric gram-negative pathogens. From 1 January 2024 to 31 December 2024, fifty-five hospitals across Australia participated in the Australian Gram-negative Surveillance Outcome Program (GnSOP). A total of 10,340 isolates, comprising Enterobacterales (9,376; 90.9%), Pseudomonas aeruginosa(804; 7.7%) and Acinetobacter species (160; 1.4%), were tested using commercial automated methods. The results were analysed using European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST) breakpoints (January 2025). Key resistances reported are to the third-generation cephalosporin ceftriaxone in 14.9% of Escherichia coli and 10.5% of Klebsiella pneumoniae complex isolates. Resistance rates to ciprofloxacin were 15.4% for E. coli; 9.7% for the K. pneumoniae complex; 3.8% for the Enterobacter cloacae complex; and 8.8% for P. aeruginosa. Resistance rates to piperacillin–tazobactam were 7.5%, 10.3%, 25.2%, and 13.6% for the same four species/complexes, respectively. Thirty-nine Enterobacteralesisolates from 38 patients were shown to harbour a carbapenemase gene: 21 with a blaNDM gene (blaNDM-5 [8]; blaNDM-1 [7]; blaNDM-7 [6]); eight with blaIMP-4; four with a blaOX A-181-like gene (blaOX A-181 [2]; blaOXA-484 [1]; blaOX A-1205[1]); three with a blaOXA-48-like gene (blaOXA-48 [2]; blaOXA-244); two with blaKPC-2; and one with blaNDM-5 + blaOXA-484. Carbapenemase genes were also detected in two P. aeruginosa isolates (blaNDM-1 [1]; blaGES-5 [1]).

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