C. Chanal et al., Prevalence of beta-lactamases among 1,072 clinical strains of Proteus mirabilis: a 2-year survey in a French hospital, ANTIM AG CH, 44(7), 2000, pp. 1930-1935
beta-Lactam resistance was studied in 1,072 consecutive P. mirabilis clinic
al strains isolated at the Clermont-Ferrand teaching hospital between April
1996 and March 1998. The frequency of amoxicillin resistance was 48.5%. Am
ong the 520 amoxicillin-resistant isolates, three resistance phenotypes wer
e detected: penicillinase (407 strains [78.3%]), extended-spectrum beta-lac
tamase (74 strains [14.2%]), and inhibitor resistance (39 strains [7.5%]).
The penicillinase phenotype isolates were divided into three groups accordi
ng to the level of resistance to beta-lactams, which was shown to be relate
d to the strength of the promoter. The characterization of the different be
ta-lactamases showed that amoxicillin resistance in P. mirabilis was almost
always (97%) associated with TEM or TEM-derived beta-lactamases, most of w
hich evolved via TEM-2.