Beatriz Orden
Grupo México
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Featured researches published by Beatriz Orden.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2006
Jesús Oteo; Carmen Navarro; Emilia Cercenado; Alberto Delgado-Iribarren; Isabel Wilhelmi; Beatriz Orden; Carmen Martinez Garcia; Silvia Migueláñez; María Pérez-Vázquez; Silvia García-Cobos; Belén Aracil; Verónica Bautista; José Campos
ABSTRACT A total of 151 Escherichia coli strains resistant to cefotaxime and ceftazidime were isolated during a prospective surveillance study. These strains were characterized by clinical, microbiological, and molecular analyses and were distributed into four clusters of 103, 11, 6, and 5 isolates, along with 25 unrelated strains. The principal cluster was isolated from urine, wound, blood, and other samples in three hospitals, eight nursing homes, and a community healthcare center. This cluster was associated with both nosocomial (65%) and community-acquired (35%) infections. Most strains were resistant to ciprofloxacin, gentamicin, tobramycin, cefepime, amoxicillin-clavulanic acid, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole but were susceptible to imipenem. All isolates from the four clusters expressed the extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL) CTX-M-15. This enzyme was also present in 8 (30.8%) of the 26 unrelated isolates. The other ESBLs, CTX-M-14 and CTX-M-32, were detected in five and seven cases, respectively, but they were detected in individual E. coli isolates only. In three clusters, blaCTX-M-15 alleles were linked to an ISEcp1-like element, while in eight strains of cluster II an IS26 element preceded the blaCTX-M-15 allele. An additional pool of resistance genes included tetA, drfA14 or dfrA17, sul1 or sul2, aac(6′)Ib, and aac(3)IIb. All except one of the 27 isolates tested for genetic virulence markers harbored the same three virulence genes: iutA and fyuA (siderophores), and traT (serum survival factor). Epidemic or occasional isolates of cefotaxime- and ceftazidime-resistant E. coli can spread between distinct health facilities including hospitals, community health centers, and long-term care centers.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2007
Emilio Pérez-Trallero; Milagrosa Montes; Beatriz Orden; Esther Tamayo; José M. García-Arenzana; José M. Marimón
ABSTRACT The aim of this study was to describe the genetic characteristics of Streptococcus pyogenes showing the MLSB phenotype of macrolide resistance from 1999 to 2005 in Spain and to highlight the substantial increase in these isolates in the last few years. The antimicrobial susceptibilities of 17,232 group A streptococci isolated from Madrid and Gipuzkoa from 1999 to 2005 were studied. The presence of the resistance genes ermA, ermB, mef, tetM, and tetO and the presence of the intTn and xis genes of the Tn916-Tn1545 transposon family were studied in a sample of 739 MLSB-resistant isolates. The epidemiological relationships among these isolates were analyzed by emm typing, T typing, and multilocus sequence typing. Erythromycin resistance was found in 21.3% of the isolates analyzed (annual variation of 14.3% to 28.9%). Until 2003, most erythromycin-resistant isolates showed the M phenotype, but in 2004 and 2005, about 50% of isolates showed the MLSB phenotype. Among the MLSB-resistant isolates studied, 16 clones were identified. The most prevalent clone was a strange emm11/T11/ST403 clone with a null yqiL allele. All but one of the 463 emm11/T11/ST403 isolates carried the ermB, tetM, intTn, and xis genes. The second most prevalent MLSB-resistant clone was emm28/T28/ST52, which comprised two subclones: one bacitracin-resistant, tetracycline-susceptible subclone carrying the ermB gene (n = 115) and another bacitracin-susceptible, tetracycline-resistant subclone carrying the ermB and tetM genes (n = 33). The rapid diffusion of these two clones, and especially of emm11/T11/ST403, caused the large increase in MLSB-resistant S. pyogenes isolates in Spain, suggesting a potential ability for international dissemination.
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2009
Jesús Oteo; Beatriz Orden; Verónica Bautista; Oscar Cuevas; Margarita Arroyo; Rocío Martínez-Ruiz; María Pérez-Vázquez; Marta Alcaraz; Silvia García-Cobos; José Campos
OBJECTIVES To describe trends in fosfomycin resistance in urinary isolates of Escherichia coli producing extended-spectrum beta-lactamases (ESBLs) in relation to fosfomycin consumption and to characterize representative fosfomycin-resistant isolates. METHODS In 2007-08, an unexpected increase in fosfomycin resistance in ESBL-producing urinary E. coli was observed. Laboratory records were reviewed and a prospective surveillance study was initiated on all urinary tract infections caused by ESBL-producing, fosfomycin-resistant E. coli. bla(ESBL) types, phylogroups, genetic environment and afa/dra operon were determined by PCR and sequencing. Molecular epidemiology was analysed by PFGE and multilocus sequence typing. To elucidate possible mechanisms of fosfomycin resistance, uhpT, glpT, uhpA, ptsI, cyaA and murA genes were analysed. Fosfomycin consumption was determined as recommended by WHO. RESULTS From 2004 to 2008, fosfomycin consumption increased by 50%, while fosfomycin resistance in ESBL producers increased from 2.2% to 21.7%. Of 26 isolates studied, 24 produced CTX-M-15 and belonged to the O25b-ST131-phylogroup B2 clonal strain. PFGE revealed two clusters. Cluster I included 18 isolates, 16 of them indistinguishable from strains producing CTX-M-15 previously described in Madrid. The five isolates of Cluster II had the IS26 linked to bla(CTX-M-15) and the afa/dra operon. In Cluster I isolates, no mutations in glpT, uhpT, uhpA, ptsI, cyaA and murA were detected. Cluster II isolates showed a 15 bp deletion (A(169)-C(183)) in uhpA. CONCLUSIONS Fosfomycin resistance in urinary E. coli has increased due to the acquisition of this resistance by a previously circulating CTX-M-15-producing E. coli O25b-ST131-phylogroup B2 strain. This happened during a period when the use of fosfomycin increased by 50%.
European Journal of Pediatrics | 2004
Juan Cuadros; Ana Mazón; Rocío Martínez; Pilar González; Alberto Gil-Setas; Uxua Flores; Beatriz Orden; Peña Gómez-Herruz; Rosario San Millán
Vulvovaginitis is the most common gynaecological problem in prepubertal girls and clear-cut data on the microbial aetiology of moderate to severe infections are lacking. Many microorganisms have been reported in several studies, but frequently the paediatrician does not know the pathogenic significance of an isolate reported in vaginal specimens of girls with vulvovaginitis. A multicentre study was performed, selecting 74 girls aged 2 to 12 years old with a clinical picture of vulvovaginitis and inflammatory cells on Gram stain. All the specimens were cultured following standard microbiological techniques and the paediatricians completed a questionnaire to highlight risk factors after interviewing the parents or tutors. The data were compared with those obtained in a control group of 11 girls without vulvovaginitis attending a clinic. Streptococcus pyogenes and Haemophilus spp.were isolated in 47 and 12 cases, respectively. Upper respiratory infection in the previous month ( P <0.001) and vulvovaginitis in the previous year ( P <0.05) were identified as significant risk factors. Foreign bodies, sexual abuse, poor hygiene and bad socioeconomic situation were not identified as risk factors for the infection. Conclusion: Paediatric inflammatory vulvovaginitis is mainly caused by pathogens of the upper respiratory tract and the most common risk factor for this infection is to have suffered an upper respiratory tract infection in the previous month.
Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease | 2010
Jesús Oteo; Emilia Cercenado; Oscar Cuevas; Verónica Bautista; Alberto Delgado-Iribarren; Beatriz Orden; María Pérez-Vázquez; Silvia García-Cobos; José Campos
Cephalosporins resistance is increasing in Escherichia coli in Spain. We characterize infections by E. coli with reduced susceptibility to third-generation cephalosporins (3GCs) with the AmpC phenotype. Between January 2004 and March 2007, 121 E. coli isolates with the AmpC phenotype were collected (4.8% of all the 2538 E. coli isolates with reduced susceptibility to 3GCs). These isolates were further characterized by clinical and molecular analysis. Plasmid-encoded ampC genes were detected in 46 (38%) isolates (43 CMY-2); 75 isolates (62%) had modifications in the chromosomal ampC promoter region (c-AmpC). CMY-2 producers belonged primarily to the more virulent phylogroup D (48.4%), whereas most isolates of c-AmpC belonged to phylogroup A (56.4%). Bacteremia and infections in children were more frequently produced by CMY-2 producers. CMY-2-producing phylogroup D E. coli belonged to 8 multilocus sequence typing types. Three CMY-2 producers belonged to O25b/ST131/B2 clone. Infections caused by E. coli with the AmpC phenotype may be spreading primarily because of CMY-2-producing phylogroup D isolates, although this enzyme was also detected in the O25b/ST131/B2 clone.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2010
Milagrosa Montes; Esther Tamayo; Beatriz Orden; Julián Larruskain; Emilio Pérez-Trallero
ABSTRACT The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence and characteristics of non-fluoroquinolone (FQ)-susceptible Streptococcus pyogenes isolates and to study their mechanisms of resistance. We performed a prospective prevalence study with 468 isolates collected from 2005 to 2007 and a retrospective study that was based on the examination of existing data collected from 1999 to 2008. The retrospective study included data for isolates with high-level resistance (HR) to ciprofloxacin (MIC ≥ 32 μg/ml) (HR isolates) and isolates with the same emm types as those reported in the literature with low-level resistance (LR) to ciprofloxacin (MICs, 2 to 8 μg/ml) (LR isolates, n = 205). Genetic characterization of the isolates was performed by means of emm typing and multilocus sequence typing. The prevalence of LR ranged from 1.9% in 2005 to 30.8% in 2007. This increase was mainly due to the circulation of an emm6 subtype (emm6.4) that represented 77.1% of the LR isolates in 2007. Notably, another emm6 subtype, also detected in 2007 (emm6.37), showed coresistance to 14- and 15-membered macrolides mediated by the mefA gene. Only three HR isolates were detected (isolates emm68.1/ST247/T3,13,B3264, emm77/ST399/T28, and emm28/ST52/T28), and all were identified in the retrospective study. Overall, the 673 isolates represented 25 emm types. All LR isolates were clustered into two emm types: emm6 (six emm6 subtypes) and emm75. All the 156 emm6 isolates had LR, harbored the Ser79/Ala mutation in the parC gene product, and had the same sequence type (ST), ST382. Most (21/33) of the emm75 isolates had LR, showed the Ser79/Phe plus Asp91/Asn double mutation in the parC gene product, and were ST150. The Asp91/Asn mutation by itself did not confer resistance to FQs.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2003
Javier Sánchez-Céspedes; Margarita M. Navia; Rocío Martínez; Beatriz Orden; Rosario San Millán; Joaquín Ruiz; Jordi Vila
ABSTRACT Ten epidemiologically related Yersinia enterocolitica clinical isolates were studied. Six isolates were nalidixic acid resistant (MIC > 512 μg/ml), with mutations in the quinolone resistance-determining region (QRDR) of the gyrA gene, suggesting clonal dissemination of a nalidixic acid-susceptible Y. enterocolitica strain which has acquired different mutations generating resistance to nalidixic acid.
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2013
Silvia García-Cobos; Margarita Arroyo; José Campos; María Pérez-Vázquez; Belén Aracil; Emilia Cercenado; Beatriz Orden; Noelia Lara; Jesús Oteo
OBJECTIVES To determine the mechanisms of resistance to β-lactam antibiotics in clinical isolates of Haemophilus parainfluenzae. METHODS Twenty clinical isolates of H. parainfluenzae with decreased susceptibility to aminopenicillins were examined and compared with a control group of 20 fully susceptible isolates. In this collection, the presence of amino acid substitutions in the transpeptidase domain of penicillin-binding protein 3 (PBP3), β-lactamase production and the surrounding genetic regions of blaTEM genes in selected isolates were analysed. RESULTS Of the 20 non-susceptible isolates, 8 produced TEM β-lactamase (gBLPAR), 7 had mutations in the transpeptidase domain of the ftsI gene related to decreased susceptibility to β-lactams (gBLNAR) and 5 had both resistance mechanisms (gBLPACR). No resistance mechanisms were identified in the susceptible control group (gBLNAS). gBLNAR isolates had MIC90 values 4- to 16-fold higher than gBLNAS isolates for ampicillin, amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, cefuroxime, cefotaxime and cefixime, and the most common PBP3 mutation was Asn526Ser. The additional Ser385Thr substitution (III-like group) may confer decreased susceptibility to cefotaxime, cefixime and aztreonam, as in Haemophilus influenzae. In two β-lactamase-positive isolates without PBP3 mutations, the inhibitor-resistant TEM (IRT) β-lactamases TEM-34 and the novel TEM-182 were detected and carried by a TnA transposon of the Tn2 type; both isolates had an amoxicillin/clavulanic acid MIC of ≥8 mg/L. The TnA transposons of two β-lactamase-positive isolates (TEM-1 and TEM-182) were inserted between the tfc20 and tfc21 genes, typically associated with integrative and conjugative elements in Haemophilus spp.; the TEM-34 IRT β-lactamase was harboured in a ∼5.5 kb plasmid. CONCLUSIONS Clinical isolates of H. parainfluenzae express a variety of aminopenicillin resistance mechanisms, either alone or in combination, including PBP3 modifications, blaTEM-1 and IRT β-lactamase production.
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2016
Adriana Ortega; David Sáez; Verónica Bautista; Sara Fernández-Romero; Noelia Lara; Belén Aracil; María Pérez-Vázquez; José Campos; Jesús Oteo; José Esteban Aznar; Carolina Campelo; Isabel Sánchez-Romero; Rocío Martínez; Beatriz Orden; Alejandro González; Sonia Solís; Luisa García-Picazo; Emilia Cercenado; Almudena Alhambra; Santiago Salso; Carmen Elena Gómez; Juan Ignacio Alós; Mª Dolores Miguel-Martínez; Teresa Alarcón; Laura Llorca; Mª Teresa Ledo; Firdaous El Knaichi; Gloria Trujillo; Montserrat Morta; Belén Hernández
OBJECTIVES The objective of this study was to analyse the microbiological traits and the population structure of carbapenemase-producing (CP) Escherichia coli isolates collected in Spain between 2012 and 2014. METHODS Two-hundred-and-thirty-nine E. coli isolates non-susceptible to carbapenems were studied. The carbapenemase genes and the phylogenetic groups were characterized using PCR. MLST was carried out using the typing schemes of the University of Warwick and the Institut Pasteur. The diversity of the population structure was estimated by calculating a simple diversity index (SDI). RESULTS One-hundred-and-twenty-one isolates (50.6%) produced carbapenemases, of which 87 (71.9%) were OXA-48, 27 (22.3%) were VIM-1, 4 (3.3%) were KPC-2, 2 (1.7%) were NDM and 1 (0.8%) was IMP-22; 4 isolates were collected in 2012, 40 in 2013 and 77 in 2014. Ertapenem was more sensitive than imipenem or meropenem for screening for OXA-48-producing E. coli. Using the Warwick typing scheme, 59 different STs were identified, the most prevalent being ST131 (16.5%). The population diversity was higher among VIM-1-producing isolates (SDI = 81.5%) than among OXA-48-producing isolates (SDI = 44.8%). The Pasteur scheme had a higher discrimination capability (SDI = 55.4%) than the Warwick scheme (SDI = 48.8%). CONCLUSIONS A progressive increase in the prevalence of CP E. coli was observed, mainly due to the dissemination of OXA-48 producers. The most sensitive method for detecting decreased susceptibility of CP E. coli to carbapenems was disc diffusion with ertapenem using the EUCAST screening cut-offs. The spread of CP E. coli was due to a polyclonal population. The Pasteur scheme showed the highest discrimination power. Surveillance is crucial for the early detection of CP E. coli.
Enfermedades Infecciosas Y Microbiologia Clinica | 2004
Carmen Hernáiz; Nieves Antón; Juan Ignacio Alós; Beatriz Orden; María Ángeles Orellana; Javier Colomina; Jesús Redondo; José Luis Gómez-Garcés
Introduccion Streptococcus agalactiae es un patogeno conocido en la poblacion obstetrica y como causa de infeccion invasiva en adultos con enfermedad de base. Sin embargo, su papel en las infecciones del tracto urinario de poblacion adulta no gestante que acude a los centros de salud ha sido poco estudiado Metodos Se investigo en cinco lugares de Espana durante 6 meses el significado clinico de los aislamientos de S. agalactiae de muestras de orina procedentes de pacientes de centros de salud. Para ello se diseno un protocolo donde se incluyeron datos personales, epidemiologicos y clinicos. Se estudiaron 85 pacientes, de los cuales 79 eran mujeres (17 embarazadas) y 6 varones Resultados Se objetivo piuria en el 72,9% de los casos. El 26,4% (n = 18) de las mujeres no gestantes y los varones padecian algun tipo de enfermedad cronica de base y el 35,3% (n = 24) presentaba trastornos urinarios. En el grupo de gestantes, el 53% tenia bacteriuria asintomatica y el 35,3% colonizacion vaginal y/o uretral. En el grupo de mujeres no gestantes y varones, la entidad mas frecuente fue la cistitis no complicada, con el 66,1% (45 de 68) de los casos, despues la infeccion complicada con el 19,1% y finalmente la bacteriuria asintomatica con el 11,8%. De las 45 pacientes con diagnostico de cistitis no complicada, 35 (77,7%) tenian mas de 40 anos y 19 (42,2%) mas de 60 anos Conclusiones En los adultos no gestantes que acuden a centros de salud el aislamiento de S. agalactiae en orina significa presuntivamente en mas de la mitad de los casos infeccion urinaria no complicada, y se da sobre todo en mujeres mayores de 40 anos