Tracing carriage, acquisition, and transmission of ESBL-producing Escherichia coli over two years in a tertiary care hospital

Abstract Background The impact of community carriage on the influx of extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Enterobacterales (ESBL-E) into hospitals remains understudied. In this prospective 2-year single-centre study, we investigate the community ESBL-E influx and trace the colonisation, nosoc...

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Main Authors: Minh Ngoc Nguyen, Beryl Primrose Gladstone, Giulia De Angelis, Michael Biggel, Basil Britto Xavier, Christine Lammens, Qiang Lin, Sandra Van Puyvelde, Herman Goossens, Samir Kumar-Singh, Youri Glupczynski, Yehuda Carmeli, Evelina Tacconelli, Surbhi Malhotra-Kumar, the SATURN WP1, 4, 5 study groups
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2024-12-01
Series:Genome Medicine
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13073-024-01424-2
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Summary:Abstract Background The impact of community carriage on the influx of extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Enterobacterales (ESBL-E) into hospitals remains understudied. In this prospective 2-year single-centre study, we investigate the community ESBL-E influx and trace the colonisation, nosocomial acquisition, transmission, and infection dynamics of ESBL-producing Escherichia coli (ESBL-Ec) in non-ICU wards at a tertiary care hospital. Methods This study reports primary and post hoc outcomes of the clinical trial NCT01208519 in which hospitalised patients were screened for rectal carriage of ESBL-E. ESBL-Ec isolates from ≈50% of carriers, including all patients who developed infections, were sequenced and genotyped. Endogenous infection was defined as infection by the same strain (< 10 SNPs distance) as colonizing strain. Results Of 3703 screened patients, 456 (12.3%) were ESBL-positive-at-admission (PA-ESBL). Of the 2268 ESBL-negative-at-admission (NA-ESBL) patients with follow-up samples, 240 (10.6%) acquired ESBL-E (HA-ESBL), with an incidence density rate of 7.96 cases/1000 patient-day, notably higher in patients receiving antibiotics (P < 0.001). PA- and HA-ESBL patients developed significantly more ESBL-E infections than ESBL-free patients (P < 0.001). Sequenced ESBL-Ec showed high clonal diversity dominated by the multidrug-resistant and highly virulent ST131 clade, C2/H30-Rx. Among ESBL-Ec infections, 60% (18/30) were endogenous. Direct between-patients transmission clusters (n = 21) involved 23.9% (48/201) of patients and 23.0% (84/366) of ESBL-Ec isolates. Conclusions Our data show a high prevalence of nosocomial acquisition of ESBL-E in a non-ICU setting. The study provides genomic evidence that the endogenous reservoir is the main driver of ESBL-Ec infections underscoring the need for wide implementation of antibiotic stewardship programmes to reduce antibiotic pressure.
ISSN:1756-994X