Application of the multifactor dimensionality reduction method in evaluation of the roles of multiple genes/enzymes in multidrug-resistant acquisition in Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains.

Journal: Epidemiology and infection
PMID:

Abstract

Multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa (MDRPA) infections are major threats to healthcare-associated infection control and the intrinsic molecular mechanisms of MDRPA are also unclear. We examined 348 isolates of P. aeruginosa, including 188 MDRPA and 160 non-MDRPA, obtained from five tertiary-care hospitals in Guangzhou, China. Significant correlations were found between gene/enzyme carriage and increased rates of antimicrobial resistance (P < 0·01). gyrA mutation, OprD loss and metallo-β-lactamase (MBL) presence were identified as crucial molecular risk factors for MDRPA acquisition by a combination of univariate logistic regression and a multifactor dimensionality reduction approach. The MDRPA rate was also elevated with the increase in positive numbers of those three determinants (P < 0·001). Thus, gyrA mutation, OprD loss and MBL presence may serve as predictors for early screening of MDRPA infections in clinical settings.

Authors

  • Z Yao
    Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics,Guangdong Pharmaceutical University,Guangzhou,China.
  • Y Peng
    Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics,Guangdong Pharmaceutical University,Guangzhou,China.
  • J Bi
    Department of Environmental and School Health,Shajing Health Inspection Institute,Shenzhen,China.
  • C Xie
    Department of Epidemic Prevention,Luogang Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,Guangzhou,China.
  • X Chen
    Division of Infectious Diseases,The People's Hospital of Meizhou,Meizhou,China.
  • Y Li
  • X Ye
    Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics,Guangdong Pharmaceutical University,Guangzhou,China.
  • J Zhou
    Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics,Guangdong Pharmaceutical University,Guangzhou,China.