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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, December 2006, p. 4217-4219, Vol. 50, No. 12
0066-4804/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.00518-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Rapid Emergence of Resistance to Linezolid during Linezolid Therapy of an Enterococcus faecium Infection
Jamela Seedat,1
Günther Zick,2
Ingo Klare,3
Carola Konstabel,3
Norbert Weiler,2 and
Hany Sahly1*
Institute for Infection Medicine, Brunswiker Str. 4,1
Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Schwanenweg 21, University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Kiel, D-24105 Kiel,2
Robert Koch Institute, Wernigerode Branch, Burgstr. 37, D-38855 Wernigerode, Germany3
Received 27 April 2006/
Returned for modification 8 May 2006/
Accepted 6 September 2006

ABSTRACT
We report the emergence of linezolid resistance (MICs of 16
to 32 mg/liter) in clonally related vancomycin-susceptible and
-resistant
Enterococcus faecium isolates from an intensive care
unit patient after 12 days of linezolid therapy. Only linezolid-susceptible
isolates of the same clone were detected at 28 days after termination
of linezolid therapy.

TEXT
Enterococci are part of the normal intestinal flora, but they
can also cause serious infections of animals and humans. Approximately
90% of enterococcal infections are caused by
Enterococcus faecalis,
and 5% to 10% are caused by
Enterococcus faecium (
16). The percentage
of enterococcal infections caused by
E. faecium has increased
in recent years, probably due to the broad spectrum of intrinsic
and acquired antibiotic resistance and carriage of virulence
genes by strains of this species (
15). Glycopeptide resistance
is mediated by the
vanA and
vanB gene clusters, which are located
on transposons Tn
1546 and Tn
1547, respectively (
4). Serious
infections caused by vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE),
whose incidence has been rising in recent years, are proving
increasingly difficult to treat. Linezolid, the first of a new
class of systemic antibacterial agents, the oxazolidinones,
is among the first-line therapeutics against all VRE infections
except endocarditis (
18). Linezolid was licensed for clinical
use in Europe in 2001. Enterococcal resistance to linezolid
was first described in 1999 in the United States and later was
sporadically detected in enterococci worldwide (
10). In Germany,
a surveillance study aimed at the detection of linezolid resistance
among VRE in 2001 and 2002 found no linezolid-resistant enterococci
(
2). The first linezolid-resistant VRE in Germany was reported
in 2004 (
6). However, treatment failure due to emergence of
linezolid resistance or reduced susceptibility of enterococci
is rare (
1,
13).
In the present paper, we report the isolation of linezolid-resistant E. faecium isolates from various specimens taken from a patient after 12 days of linezolid therapy.
The patient (a 76-year-old female) was transferred to our surgical intensive care unit for acute gastrointestinal bleeding 2 weeks after undergoing a pancreaticoduodenectomy (Whipple's procedure). On transfer the patient was mechanically ventilated and required circulatory support for septic shock. Antibiotic therapy was started with piperacillin-tazobactam (4.5 g three times a day intravenously [i.v.]) and ciprofloxacin (400 mg twice a day i.v.) (both continued for 12 days) plus fluconazole (400 mg once a day i.v.) (continued for 18 days). During the subsequent course, necrotizing pancreatitis persisted and several surgical interventions were performed. One month after the initial surgery, the remaining pancreatic tissue was resected and splenectomy performed. One week prior to this intervention, the first vancomycin-resistant but linezolid-sensitive E. faecium (VRLSE) strain was isolated, as well as a multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain. Both were repeatedly detected in intra-abdominal cultures, easy flow catheters, and urine, whereas blood cultures remained negative. Consequently, antibiotic treatment was changed to a combination of meropenem (1.0 g three times a day i.v.) and linezolid (600 mg twice a day i.v.) (continued for 12 days). Thereafter, microbiological swabs of the abdominal drainages revealed the presence of E. faecium isolates with resistance either to both vancomycin and linezolid (VRLRE) or to linezolid alone (VSLRE). However, in the absence of signs of inflammatory reaction or fever, antibiotic therapy was terminated despite the continuing presence of E. faecium and also of multidrug-resistant P. aeruginosa. MICs of antimicrobial agents, including vancomycin and linezolid, were determined with the Vitek II system. Susceptibilities to linezolid and vancomycin were also determined by Etest according to the manufacturer's recommendations and by broth microdilution (3). Follow-up microbiological swabs of the abdominal drainages up to 4 weeks after termination of linezolid therapy revealed the presence of VRLRE. Thereafter, E. faecium isolates with linezolid resistance were no longer detectable, whereas VRLSE persisted throughout the intensive care unit treatment period (Table 1). Three months after admission, the patient was transferred to a rehabilitation center in a stable condition.
Six representative enterococcal isolates, collected at different
times and showing different resistance phenotypes (linezolid
MICs, 2 to 32 mg/liter; vancomycin MICs, 1 to 32 mg/liter) (Table
1), were subjected to additional investigations. The six isolates
were evaluated for their genetic relatedness by using SmaI macrorestriction
analysis (MRA). Assessment of the MRA patterns according to
international criteria for genotyping by MRA (
11,
19) indicated
both close relatedness and identity (Fig.
1, lanes 1 to 6).
Additionally, we could show by multilocus sequence typing (MLST)
(
7) that these isolates belong to clonal complex 17 (CC-17)
of
E. faecium. They represent sequence type ST-18, which is
a double-locus variant of ST-17, the founder of CC-17.
E. faecium strains belonging to CC-17 are epidemic-virulent, hospital-adapted
strains which have spread in hospitals worldwide (
21), including
German clinics (
7).
The presence of
vanA and
vanB genes in all isolates was determined
by PCR as described elsewhere (
7). The
vanA gene was detected
in all VRLSE and VRLRE isolates but not in the VSLRE isolates
(Table
1). The VSLRE isolates were genotypically identical or
closely related to the vancomycin-resistant isolates (Fig.
1),
raising the possibility that the VSLRE isolates were segregants
from VRLRE which had lost the
vanA gene cluster. It is also
conceivable, however, that glycopeptide-resistant and glycopeptide-sensitive
E. faecium isolates with identical MRA patterns were present
at the same time and that both developed linezolid resistance
during linezolid therapy.
Linezolid resistance in enterococci is usually associated with a point mutation in the central region of domain V of the 23S rRNA gene leading to a nucleotide change from guanine (G) to uracil (U) at position 2576 in the 23S rRNA, the target of oxazolidinone antibiotics (8, 12). Identification of the resistance genotype is complicated by the presence of six 23S rRNA alleles in E. faecium. Although one mutated 23S rRNA allele seems to be sufficient to confer resistance, the number of mutated alleles correlates with an increase in the MICs of linezolid (8). In the E. faecium isolates examined, mutations in the 23S rRNA genes of three out of six 23S rRNA alleles led to linezolid resistance as determined by real-time PCR using two TaqMan probes as described elsewhere (20).
The rapid emergence of resistance to linezolid in our E. faecium isolates contradicts previous reports indicating that such resistance arises only after prolonged therapy with this antibiotic (5). Interestingly, no linezolid-resistant E. faecium could be detected in follow-up swabs 4 weeks after termination of linezolid therapy, although vancomycin resistance was still present (Fig. 1, lane 6). This observation is consistent with a recent report describing the reversion to susceptibility of a linezolid-resistant Staphylococcus aureus strain in a patient following termination of linezolid therapy (9).
In conclusion, because resistance to linezolid during therapy might occur rapidly, close monitoring of the strains' susceptibilities is advisable.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute for Infection Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Kiel, Brunswiker Str. 4, D-24105 Kiel, Germany. Phone: 49 431 597 3316. Fax: 49 431 597 3296. E-mail:
sahly{at}infmed.uni-kiel.de.

Published ahead of print on 18 September 2006. 

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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, December 2006, p. 4217-4219, Vol. 50, No. 12
0066-4804/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.00518-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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