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. 2021 Apr 26;10(5):492. doi: 10.3390/antibiotics10050492

Table 1.

Antimicrobial susceptibility results of the most commonly isolated carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae strains.

Antibiotics * All (n = 131) K. pneumoniae (n = 77) E. cloacae (n = 31) E. coli (n = 13)
ETP 100% (n = 131) 98.7% (n = 76) 100% (n = 31) 100% (n = 13)
IMP 83.21% (n = 109) 80.5% (n = 62) 84% (n = 26) 76.92% (n = 10)
GEN 100% (n = 131) 100% (n = 77) 100% (n = 31) 100% (n = 13)
CIP 87.02%(n = 114) 84.42% (n = 65) 93.55% (n = 29) 84.61% (n = 11)
SXT 87.79% (n = 115) 88.30 (n = 68) 93.55% (n = 29) 76.92% (n = 10)
PTZ 100% (n = 131) 100% (n = 77) 100% (n = 31) 100% (n = 13)
CS 34.35% (n = 45) 27.27% (n = 21) 48.39% (n = 15) 38.46% (n = 5)

* ETP (ertapenem); IMP (imipenem); GEN (gentamicin); CIP (ciprofloxacin); SXT (trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole); PTZ (piperacillin/tazobactam); CS (colistin).