Molecular epidemiology and antimicrobial resistance pattern of extended-spectrum- -lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae in Glasgow, Scotland

To establish the molecular epidemiology and antimicrobial resistance pattern of extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL)-producing Enterobacteriaceae harbouring ... in Glasgow, Scotland. During a 12 week period, Enterobacteriaceae isolates obtained from urine samples were collected and susceptibility te...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy 2012-03, Vol.67 (3), p.573-577
Hauptverfasser: Khanna, N., Boyes, J., Lansdell, P. M., Hamouda, A., Amyes, S. G. B.
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container_end_page 577
container_issue 3
container_start_page 573
container_title Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy
container_volume 67
creator Khanna, N.
Boyes, J.
Lansdell, P. M.
Hamouda, A.
Amyes, S. G. B.
description To establish the molecular epidemiology and antimicrobial resistance pattern of extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL)-producing Enterobacteriaceae harbouring ... in Glasgow, Scotland. During a 12 week period, Enterobacteriaceae isolates obtained from urine samples were collected and susceptibility testing performed. Isolates were screened for the presence of ... by multiplex PCR and selected Escherichia coli genes were subsequently sequenced. PFGE analysis was performed on selected E. coli isolates in order to identify clonal relationships. There were 155 phenotypically confirmed non-duplicate Enterobacteriaceae isolates obtained from urine samples. ... was identified in 131/155 (84.5%) of the ESBL-producing isolates, with CTX-M group 1 enzymes accounting for 103/131 (78.6%) of these. The remaining 24 isolates carried other ... types, including CTX-M group 2, CTX-M group 9 and an unidentifiable combination designated CTX-M group G2/Gx. A sample of 46/97 (47.4%) CTX-M-positive E. coli isolates was chosen for PFGE and demographic information regarding the source of the isolates was collated. Eight E. coli clusters were identified by PFGE; however, they did not achieve the 85% cut-off to demonstrate clonality. Nitrofurantoin resistance was significantly greater in the E. coli isolates expressing a non-CTX-M group 1 ESBL when compared with the E. coli isolates expressing a CTX-M group 1 ESBL. As seen in other British studies, ... has become the predominant ESBL type in Glasgow, Scotland. The PFGE results show that four different CTX-M groups appear to be circulating in the community and within all four hospitals in the locality. There is little correlation between strain genotype and CTX-M group, thus it is unlikely that cross-infection alone is the driver. It is possible that plasmid migration of CTX-M genes within the E. coli population is occurring. (ProQuest: ... denotes formulae/symbols omitted.)
doi_str_mv 10.1093/jac/dkr523
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It is possible that plasmid migration of CTX-M genes within the E. coli population is occurring. 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There were 155 phenotypically confirmed non-duplicate Enterobacteriaceae isolates obtained from urine samples. ... was identified in 131/155 (84.5%) of the ESBL-producing isolates, with CTX-M group 1 enzymes accounting for 103/131 (78.6%) of these. The remaining 24 isolates carried other ... types, including CTX-M group 2, CTX-M group 9 and an unidentifiable combination designated CTX-M group G2/Gx. A sample of 46/97 (47.4%) CTX-M-positive E. coli isolates was chosen for PFGE and demographic information regarding the source of the isolates was collated. Eight E. coli clusters were identified by PFGE; however, they did not achieve the 85% cut-off to demonstrate clonality. Nitrofurantoin resistance was significantly greater in the E. coli isolates expressing a non-CTX-M group 1 ESBL when compared with the E. coli isolates expressing a CTX-M group 1 ESBL. As seen in other British studies, ... has become the predominant ESBL type in Glasgow, Scotland. The PFGE results show that four different CTX-M groups appear to be circulating in the community and within all four hospitals in the locality. There is little correlation between strain genotype and CTX-M group, thus it is unlikely that cross-infection alone is the driver. It is possible that plasmid migration of CTX-M genes within the E. coli population is occurring. 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PFGE analysis was performed on selected E. coli isolates in order to identify clonal relationships. There were 155 phenotypically confirmed non-duplicate Enterobacteriaceae isolates obtained from urine samples. ... was identified in 131/155 (84.5%) of the ESBL-producing isolates, with CTX-M group 1 enzymes accounting for 103/131 (78.6%) of these. The remaining 24 isolates carried other ... types, including CTX-M group 2, CTX-M group 9 and an unidentifiable combination designated CTX-M group G2/Gx. A sample of 46/97 (47.4%) CTX-M-positive E. coli isolates was chosen for PFGE and demographic information regarding the source of the isolates was collated. Eight E. coli clusters were identified by PFGE; however, they did not achieve the 85% cut-off to demonstrate clonality. Nitrofurantoin resistance was significantly greater in the E. coli isolates expressing a non-CTX-M group 1 ESBL when compared with the E. coli isolates expressing a CTX-M group 1 ESBL. 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source Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection; Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry
subjects Antimicrobial agents
Drug resistance
E coli
Enterobacteriaceae
Epidemiology
Escherichia coli
Plasmids
title Molecular epidemiology and antimicrobial resistance pattern of extended-spectrum- -lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae in Glasgow, Scotland
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