Volume 21, Number 11—November 2015
Research
Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae in Children, United States, 1999–2012
Table 1
Characteristic | No. (%) isolates analyzed, N = 316,253 | No. (%) CRE isolates analyzed, n = 266 | % CRE, 266/316,253 (0.084) | Met inclusion criteria,† 316,253/438,600 (72.11) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Organism | ||||
Escherichia coli | 23,9274 (75.66) | 58 (21.80) | 0.02 | 70.60 |
Klebsiella pneumoniae | 23,442 (7.41) | 83 (31.20) | 0.35 | 76.91 |
Proteus mirabilis | 19,506 (6.17) | 2 (0.75) | 0.01 | 71.35 |
Enterobacter species‡ | 17,215 (5.44) | 98 (36.84) | 0.57 | 80.84 |
Serratia marcescens | 10,086 (3.19) | 17 (6.39) | 0.17 | 85.77 |
Citrobacter species§ |
6,730 (2.13) |
8 (3.01) |
0.12 |
76.42 |
Health care setting | ||||
Outpatient | 245,257 (77.55) | 89 (33.46) | 0.04 | 71.28 |
Inpatient | 53,832 (17.02) | 116 (43.61) | 0.22 | 71.71 |
Inpatient–ICU | 10,048 (3.18) | 55 (20.68) | 0.55 | 88.12 |
Unknown | 6,041 (1.91) | 5 (1.88) | 0.08 | 88.09 |
Nursing home |
1,075 (0.34) |
1 (0.38) |
0.09 |
90.34 |
Isolate source | ||||
Urine | 265,690 (84.01) | 85 (31.95) | 0.03 | 70.30 |
Wound | 23,269 (7.36) | 66 (24.81) | 0.28 | 80.16 |
Lower respiratory tract | 14,400 (4.55) | 74 (27.82) | 0.51 | 86.64 |
Blood | 8,605 (2.72) | 37 (13.91) | 0.43 | 87.56 |
Other¶ |
4,289 (1.36) |
4 (1.50) |
0.09 |
82.91 |
Age group, y | ||||
1–5 | 120,500 (38.10) | 145 (54.51) | 0.12 | 72.43 |
6–12 | 100,198 (31.68) | 63 (23.68) | 0.06 | 71.68 |
13–17 |
95,555 (30.21) |
58 (21.80) |
0.06 |
72.14 |
Sex | ||||
F | 255,181 (80.69) | 154 (57.89) | 0.06 | 70.49 |
M | 56,105 (17.74) | 105 (39.47) | 0.19 | 78.76 |
Unknown |
4,967 (1.57) |
7 (2.63) |
0.14 |
5.37 |
Region | ||||
West | 78,795 (24.92) | 47 (17.67) | 0.06 | 73.62 |
South Atlantic | 69,066 (21.84) | 53 (19.92) | 0.08 | 78.97 |
East North Central | 57,846 (18.29) | 18 (6.77) | 0.03 | 56.13 |
South Central | 44,414 (14.04) | 28 (10.53) | 0.06 | 82.22 |
North East | 41,892 (13.25) | 63 (23.68%) | 0.15 | 71.35 |
West North Central | 24,240 (7.66) | 57 (21.43) | 0.24 | 67.49 |
*Data for patients <1 year of age were not available for all years and excluded from analysis. CRE, carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae. CRE is defined as resistance to all tested third-generation cephalosporins (ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, or ceftazidime), and nonsusceptiblity to >1 carbapenem (ertapenem, imipenem, meropenem, or doripenem). For bacteria with intrinsic imipenem nonsusceptibility (P. mirabilis), the CRE criteria required nonsusceptibility to >2 of the carbapenems listed. ICU, intensive care unit.
†Isolates were tested against >1 third-generation cephalosporin and >1 carbapenem of those considered for the CRE phenotype.
‡E. aerogenes and E. cloacae.
§C. freundii and C. koseri.
¶Includes upper respiratory tract and skin cultures.