A Point Prevalence Survey of Antibiotic Resistance in the Irish Environment, 2018–2019

•National evaluation of antibiotic resistance in sewage sources and water bodies.•Detection of carbapenemase producers in waters designated of good/excellent quality.•Natural resistome is highlighted by the detection of ESBLs in ‘cold spot’ locations.•Highly similar Klebsiella isolates from sewage a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environment international 2021-07, Vol.152, p.106466, Article 106466
Hauptverfasser: Hooban, Brigid, Fitzhenry, Kelly, Cahill, Niamh, Joyce, Aoife, O' Connor, Louise, Bray, James E., Brisse, Sylvain, Passet, Virginie, Abbas Syed, Raza, Cormican, Martin, Morris, Dearbháile
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•National evaluation of antibiotic resistance in sewage sources and water bodies.•Detection of carbapenemase producers in waters designated of good/excellent quality.•Natural resistome is highlighted by the detection of ESBLs in ‘cold spot’ locations.•Highly similar Klebsiella isolates from sewage and water suggest a single sub-lineage.•Results highlight need for regular monitoring of waters for antibiotic resistance. Water bodies worldwide have proven to be vast reservoirs of clinically significant antibiotic resistant organisms. Contamination of waters by anthropogenic discharges is a significant contributor to the widespread dissemination of antibiotic resistance. The aim of this research was to investigate multiple different anthropogenic sources on a national scale for the role they play in the environmental propagation of antibiotic resistance. A total of 39 water and 25 sewage samples were collected across four local authority areas in the West, East and South of Ireland. In total, 211 Enterobacterales were isolated (139 water, 72 sewage) and characterised. A subset of isolates (n=60) were chosen for whole genome sequencing. Direct comparisons of the water versus sewage isolate collections revealed a higher percentage of sewage isolates displayed resistance to cefoxitin (46%) and ertapenem (32%), while a higher percentage of water isolates displayed resistance to tetracycline (55%) and ciprofloxacin (71%). Half of all isolates displayed extended spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL) production phenotypically (n = 105/211; 50%), with blaCTX-M detected in 99/105 isolates by PCR. Carbapenemase genes were identified in 11 isolates (6 sewage, 5 water). The most common variant was blaOXA-48 (n=6), followed by blaNDM-5 (n=2) and blaKPC-2 (n=2). Whole genome sequencing analysis revealed numerous different sequence types in circulation in both waters and sewage including E. coli ST131 (n=15), ST38 (n=8), ST10 (n=4) along with Klebsiella ST405 (n=3) and ST11 (n=2). Core genome MLST (cgMLST) comparisons uncovered three highly similar Klebsiella isolates originating from hospital sewage and two nearby waters. The Klebsiella isolates from an estuary and seawater displayed 99.1% and 98.8% cgMLST identity to the hospital sewage isolate respectively. In addition, three pairs of E. coli isolates from different waters also revealed cgMLST similarities, indicating widespread dissemination and persistence of certain strains in the aquatic environment. These findings highlight
ISSN:0160-4120
1873-6750
DOI:10.1016/j.envint.2021.106466