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Trends in Stenotrophomonas maltophilia antibiotic resistance rates in the United States Veterans Affairs Health System.

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Introduction. Stenotrophomonas maltophilia is an important multidrug-resistant Gram-negative pathogen. While largely a hospital-acquired pathogen, there have been increasing reports of the pathogen in the community.Gap Statement. Trends in S. maltophilia… Click to show full abstract

Introduction. Stenotrophomonas maltophilia is an important multidrug-resistant Gram-negative pathogen. While largely a hospital-acquired pathogen, there have been increasing reports of the pathogen in the community.Gap Statement. Trends in S. maltophilia prevalence and resistance rates that include outpatient isolates are unknown.Aim. We described recent trends in prevalence and resistance of S. maltophilia in the national Veterans Affairs (VA) Healthcare system.Methodology. The study identified positive S. maltophilia clinical cultures among VA adult patients from 2010 to 2018 across all VA hospitals, long-term care facilities/units, and outpatient settings. Annual S. maltophilia resistance rates were evaluated. Multidrug resistant (MDR) was defined as resistance to sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim (SMX/TMP) and minocycline or levofloxacin. Time trends were assessed with regression analyses to estimate annual average percent changes (AAPC) with 95 % confidence intervals using Joinpoint software.Results. Over the 9 year study period, 18 285 S. maltophilia cultures were identified (57 % hospital, 3 % long-term care, 40 % outpatient). The most common source of S. maltophilia cultures were respiratory cultures (34.6 %) followed by urine cultures (30.4 %). In VA hospitals and long-term care facilities, the number of S. maltophilia cultures decreased significantly (by 5.4% and 8.4 % per year respectively). Overall, 3.1 % of isolates were MDR which remained stable over the study period. Resistance to other antibiotics assessed mostly remained stable, except SMX/TMP resistance decreased significantly by 8.5 % (2010, 15 %; 2018, 6 %) per year in VA hospitals.Conclusion. While previous work has recognized S. maltophilia as primarily a nosocomial pathogen, the present study found that 40 % of cultures collected were among outpatients. Between 2010 and 2018, the number of positive S. maltophilia cultures decreased significantly in the national VA Healthcare System. Resistance to SMX/TMP decreased over the study period in VA hospitals and now more closely reflects previously reported resistance rates worldwide (0-10 %). MDR S. maltophilia remained stable and low in the national VA Healthcare System.

Keywords: system; veterans affairs; stenotrophomonas maltophilia; maltophilia cultures; resistance; resistance rates

Journal Title: Journal of medical microbiology
Year Published: 2022

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