Mary Hinkle
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research
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Featured researches published by Mary Hinkle.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016
Patrick McGann; Erik Snesrud; Rosslyn Maybank; Brendan W. Corey; Ana C. Ong; Robert Clifford; Mary Hinkle; Timothy J. Whitman; Emil Lesho; Kurt E. Schaecher
The recent discovery of a plasmid-borne colistin resistance gene, mcr-1 , in China heralds the emergence of truly pan-drug-resistant bacteria ([1][1]). The gene has been found primarily in Escherichia coli but has also been identified in other members of the Enterobacteriaceae in human, animal, food
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2017
Erik Snesrud; Ana C. Ong; Brendan W. Corey; Yoon I. Kwak; Robert Clifford; Todd Gleeson; Shannon Wood; Timothy J. Whitman; Emil Lesho; Mary Hinkle; Patrick McGann
ABSTRACT The emergence of a transferable colistin resistance gene (mcr-1) is of global concern. The insertion sequence ISApl1 is a key component in the mobilization of this gene, but its role remains poorly understood. Six Escherichia coli isolates were cultured from the same patient over the course of 1 month in Germany and the United States after a brief hospitalization in Bahrain for an unconnected illness. Four carried mcr-1 as determined by real-time PCR, but two were negative. Two additional mcr-1-negative E. coli isolates were collected during follow-up surveillance 9 months later. All isolates were analyzed by whole-genome sequencing (WGS). WGS revealed that the six initial isolates were composed of two distinct strains: an initial ST-617 E. coli strain harboring mcr-1 and a second, unrelated, mcr-1-negative ST-32 E. coli strain that emerged 2 weeks after hospitalization. Follow-up swabs taken 9 months later were negative for the ST-617 strain, but the mcr-1-negative ST-32 strain was still present. mcr-1 was associated with a single copy of ISApl1, located on a 64.5-kb IncI2 plasmid that shared >95% homology with other mcr-1 IncI2 plasmids. ISApl1 copy numbers ranged from 2 for the first isolate to 6 for the final isolate, but ISApl1 movement was independent of mcr-1. Some movement was accompanied by gene disruption, including the loss of genes encoding proteins involved in stress responses, arginine catabolism, and l-arabinose utilization. These data represent the first comprehensive analysis of ISApl1 movement in serial clinical isolates and reveal that, under certain conditions, ISApl1 is a highly active IS element whose movement may be detrimental to the host cell.
Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease | 2016
Patrick McGann; Jessica L. Bunin; Erik Snesrud; Seema Singh; Rosslyn Maybank; Ana C. Ong; Yoon I. Kwak; Scott Seronello; Robert Clifford; Mary Hinkle; Stephen Yamada; Jason Barnhill; Emil Lesho
Whole genome sequencing (WGS) is increasingly employed in clinical settings, though few assessments of turnaround times (TAT) have been performed in real-time. In this study, WGS was used to investigate an unfolding outbreak of vancomycin resistant Enterococcus faecium (VRE) among 3 patients in the ICU of a tertiary care hospital. Including overnight culturing, a TAT of just 48.5 h for a comprehensive report was achievable using an Illumina Miseq benchtop sequencer. WGS revealed that isolates from patient 2 and 3 differed from that of patient 1 by a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), indicating nosocomial transmission. However, the unparalleled resolution provided by WGS suggested that nosocomial transmission involved two separate events from patient 1 to patient 2 and 3, and not a linear transmission suspected by the time line. Rapid TATs are achievable using WGS in the clinical setting and can provide an unprecedented level of resolution for outbreak investigations.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Emil Lesho; Robert Clifford; Fatma Onmus-Leone; Lakshmi Appalla; Erik Snesrud; Yoon I. Kwak; Ana Ong; Rosslyn Maybank; Paige Waterman; Patricia Rohrbeck; Michael Julius; Amanda L. Roth; Joshua Martinez; Lindsey Nielsen; Eric Steele; Patrick McGann; Mary Hinkle
Objective We sought to: 1) provide an overview of the genomic epidemiology of an extensive collection of carbapenemase-producing bacteria (CPB) collected in the U.S. Department of Defense health system; 2) increase awareness of the public availability of the sequences, isolates, and customized antimicrobial resistance database of that system; and 3) illustrate challenges and offer mitigations for implementing next generation sequencing (NGS) across large health systems. Design Prospective surveillance and system-wide implementation of NGS. Setting 288-hospital healthcare network. Methods All phenotypically carbapenem resistant bacteria underwent CarbaNP® testing and PCR, followed by NGS. Commercial (Newbler and Geneious), on-line (ResFinder), and open-source software (Btrim, FLASh, Bowtie2, an Samtools) were used for assembly, SNP detection and clustering. Laboratory capacity, throughput, and response time were assessed. Results From 2009 through 2015, 27,000 multidrug-resistant Gram-negative isolates were submitted. 225 contained carbapenemase-encoding genes (most commonly blaKPC, blaNDM, and blaOXA23). These were found in 15 species from 146 inpatients in 19 facilities. Genetically related CPB were found in more than one hospital. Other clusters or outbreaks were not clonal and involved genetically related plasmids, while some involved several unrelated plasmids. Relatedness depended on the clustering algorithm used. Transmission patterns of plasmids and other mobile genetic elements could not be determined without ultra-long read, single-molecule real-time sequencing. 80% of carbapenem-resistant phenotypes retained susceptibility to aminoglycosides, and 70% retained susceptibility to fluoroquinolones. However, among the CPB-confirmed genotypes, fewer than 25% retained susceptibility to aminoglycosides or fluoroquinolones. Conclusion Although NGS is increasingly acclaimed to revolutionize clinical practice, resource-constrained environments, large or geographically dispersed healthcare networks, and military or government-funded public health laboratories are likely to encounter constraints and challenges as they implement NGS across their health systems. These include lack of standardized definitions and quality control metrics, limitations of short-read sequencing, insufficient bandwidth, and the current limited availability of very expensive and scarcely available sequencing platforms. Possible solutions and mitigations are also proposed.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016
Patrick McGann; Erik Snesrud; Rosslyn Maybank; Brendan W. Corey; Ana C. Ong; Robert Clifford; Mary Hinkle; Timothy J. Whitman; Emil Lesho; Kurt E. Schaecher
Volume 60, no. 7, p. [4420–4421][1], 2016. Page 4420, right column, line 15: the correct reference for the sequence and description of plasmid pHNSHP45-2 is not reference 1 but is as follows.nnZhi C, Lv L, Yu L-F, Doi Y, Liu J-H. 2016. Dissemination of the mcr-1 colistin resistance gene. Lancet
Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2018
Emil Lesho; Melissa Bronstein; Patrick McGann; Jason Stam; Yoon I. Kwak; Rosslyn Maybank; Jodi McNamara; Megan Callahan; Jean Campbell; Mary Hinkle; Edward E. Walsh
OBJECTIVE Candida auris (CA) is an emerging multidrug-resistant pathogen associated with increased mortality. The environment may play a role, but transmission dynamics remain poorly understood. We sought to limit environmental and patient CA contamination following a sustained unsuspected exposure. DESIGN Quasi-experimental observation. SETTING A 528-bed teaching hospital. PATIENTS The index case patient and 17 collocated ward mates. INTERVENTION Immediately after confirmation of CA in the bloodstream and urine of a patient admitted 6 days previously, active surveillance, enhanced transmission-based precautions, environmental cleaning with peracetic acid-hydrogen peroxide and ultraviolet light, and patient relocation were undertaken. Pre-existing agreements and foundational relationships among internal multidisciplinary teams and external partners were leveraged to bolster detection and mitigation efforts and to provide genomic epidemiology. RESULTS Candida auris was isolated from 3 of 132 surface samples on days 8, 9, and 15 of ward occupancy, and from no patient samples (0 of 48). Environmental and patient isolates were genetically identical (4-8 single-nucleotide polymorphisms [SNPs]) and most closely related to the 2013 India CA-6684 strain (~200 SNPs), supporting the epidemiological hypothesis that the source of environmental contamination was the index case patient, who probably acquired the South Asian strain from another New York hospital. All isolates contained a mutation associated with azole resistance (K163R) found in the India 2105 VPCI strain but not in CA-6684. The index patient remained colonized until death. No surfaces were CA-positive 1 month later. CONCLUSION Compared to previous descriptions, CA dissemination was minimal. Immediate access to rapid CA diagnostics facilitates early containment strategies and outbreak investigations. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2018;39:53-57.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2016
Emil Lesho; Uzo Chukwuma; Michael Sparks; Charlotte G. Neumann; Douglas Richesson; Robert Clifford; Sarah Gierhart; Paige Waterman; Mary Hinkle
ABSTRACT Carbapenem-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Acinetobacter spp., and Enterobacteriaceae pose urgent public health threats. The differential burden, relative risks, associations with antimicrobial consumption, and temporal trends of those taxa in large, geographically diverse U.S. health systems remain under reported. Electronic records of all patients in a geographically dispersed 280-hospital managed-care system from 2005 to 2014 were reviewed. Carbapenem-resistant strains were identified based on Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute guidelines and breakpoints. A total of 360,000 potentially carbapenem-resistant strains were identified from 14.7 million cultures (80% infecting and 20% surveillance). Isolation of bacteria overseas or isolation from the bloodstream was associated with a higher relative risks of carbapenem resistance (CR; P < 0.0001). Enterobacteriaceae were isolated 11 times more frequently than P. aeruginosa and Acinetobacter spp. However, compared to Enterobacteriaceae, the CR levels were 73-fold and 210-fold higher in P. aeruginosa and Acinetobacter spp., respectively. Significant differences in the relative risk of CR between taxa, anatomic, and geographic locations persisted after adjustment for other variables, the biggest differences occurring between taxa. Overall, CR rates increased for Enterobacteriaceae (P = 0.03) and decreased for Acinetobacter spp. and P. aeruginosa (P < 0.0001). These data provide a useful baseline for resistance trending and have implications for surveillance. Infections acquired overseas and bloodstream infections are particularly important areas for continued monitoring.
Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2018
Emil Lesho; Erik Snesrud; Melissa Bronstein; Margaret Pettis; Ana Ong; Rosslyn Maybank; Yoon I. Kwak; Anthony Jones; Kelly Vore; Patrick McGann; Mary Hinkle
Financial support: Support for this study was received from the German Research Foundation (grant no.WO 1746/1-2 toM.W. and grant no. KA 4199/ 1-1 to T.H.). Additional funding was received from the Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking (grant no. 115737-2 to K.K., Combatting bacterial resistance in Europe—molecules against gram-negative infections [COMBACTE-MAGNET]). The funders had no role in the preparation of this manuscript. Potential conflicts of interest: All authors report no conflicts of interest relevant to this article.
Genome Announcements | 2017
Madeline R. Galac; Jason Stam; Rosslyn Maybank; Mary Hinkle; Dietrich Mack; Holger Rohde; Amanda L. Roth; Paul D. Fey
ABSTRACT Staphylococcus epidermidis 1457 is a frequently utilized strain that is amenable to genetic manipulation and has been widely used for biofilm-related research. We report here the whole-genome sequence of this strain, which encodes 2,277 protein-coding genes and 81 RNAs within its 2.4-Mb genome and plasmid.
Military Medicine | 2016
Emil Lesho; Xiaoxu Lin; Robert Clifford; Erik Snesrud; Fatma Onmus-Leone; Lakshmi Appalla; Ana Ong; Rosslyn Maybank; Lindsey Nielsen; Yoon I. Kwak; Mary Hinkle; John Turco; Juan A. Marin; Sally Hooks; Stacy Matthews; Stephen Hyland; Jered Little; Paige Waterman; Patrick McGann
Awareness, responsiveness, and throughput characterize an approach for enhancing the clinical impact of whole genome sequencing for austere environments and for large geographically dispersed health systems. This Department of Defense approach is informing interagency efforts linking antibiograms of multidrug-resistant organisms to their genome sequences in a public database.