Tigecycline-resistant enterococci are only rarely detected worldwide. In 2017, the National Reference Centre for Staphylococci and Enterococci noticed a nosocomial cluster of tigecycline- and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (TVRE) in a hospital of tertiary care in Northern Germany. Nineteen E. faecium isolates were analyzed by means of antimicrobial susceptibility testing and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. A subset of isolates was subjected to whole-genome sequencing. The genetic basis of tigecycline resistance was assessed by ResFinder and by comparative analyses to known tetracycline and tigecycline resistance genes. Phylogenetic investigations revealed the clustering of 11 TVRE that exhibited genotype ST117/CT1489. Two tigecycline-susceptible isolates were unrelated. Characterization of the genetic determinant putatively responsible for tigecycline resistance revealed two chromosomal changes in the TVRE population: (1) a deletion within the ribosomal protein gene rpsJ and (2) a serine insertion in and removal of transcriptional regulation of the ribosomal protection protein Tet(M). We here report the first nosocomial cluster of TVRE in a German hospital and disclosed the resistance mechanism that was most likely causative for tigecycline insusceptibility. Clonal spread of TVRE isolates can be assumed because all isolates were highly related and harbored identical chromosomal alterations associated with tigecycline resistance.
Keywords: TVRE; nosocomial cluster; rpsJ; tet(M); tigecycline resistance.