Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) infection is highly endemic in China, but estimates of infection burden are lacking. We established incidence of CRE infection from a multicenter study that covered 25 tertiary hospitals in 14 provinces. CRE cases defined as carbapenem non-susceptible C. freundii, E. coli, E. cloacae, or K. pneumoniae infections during January to December 2015 were collected and reviewed from medical records. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing and carbapenemase genes identification were performed. Among 664 CRE cases, most were caused by K. pneumoniae (73.9%), followed by E. coli (16.6%), and E. cloacae (7.1%). The overall CRE infection incidence per 10,000 discharges was 4.0, and differed significantly by region, with the highest in Jiangsu (14.97), and the lowest in Qinghai (0.34). 83.8% of patients had underlying co-morbidities; the median age was 62 years (range, 45–74) and 450 (67.8%) were male. Lower respiratory tract infections (65.4%) were most common, followed by urinary-tract infection (16.6%), intra-abdominal infection (7.7%), and bacteremia (7.7%). The overall hospital mortality rate was 33.5%. All isolates showed non-susceptibility to carbapenems and cephalosporins. Susceptibility rate of Polymyxin B was >90%. Tigecycline demonstrated higher susceptibility rate against E. coli, compared with K. pneumoniae (90.9% vs. 40.2%). Of 155 clinical isolates analyzed, 89% produced carbapenemases with a majority of isolates producing KPC (50%) and/or NDM (33.5%)-type beta-lactamases among K. pneumoniae and E. coli. Incidence of CRE infection in China was 4.0 per 10,000 discharges. The patient-based disease burden in tertiary hospitals in China is severe, suggesting an urgent need to enhance infection control.
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