AI Article Synopsis

  • Certain bacteria, such as Enterobacterales spp., are significant human pathogens found in hospitals, often residing in sinks and wastewater areas, which can serve as reservoirs for antimicrobial-resistant strains.
  • A study using whole-genome sequencing of 439 bacterial isolates revealed that hospital sink drains are populated by varied bacterial communities, with certain strains like ST635 widely distributed across different wards.
  • The research also identified a potential connection between sink bacteria and patient infections, indicating that sinks may contribute to around 10% of infections, while harboring antimicrobial resistance genes that could enhance their transfer among bacteria.

Article Abstract

and spp. are important human pathogens that cause a wide spectrum of clinical disease. In healthcare settings, sinks and other wastewater sites have been shown to be reservoirs of antimicrobial-resistant and spp., particularly in the context of outbreaks of resistant strains amongst patients. Without focusing exclusively on resistance markers or a clinical outbreak, we demonstrate that many hospital sink drains are abundantly and persistently colonized with diverse populations of , and , including both antimicrobial-resistant and susceptible strains. Using whole-genome sequencing of 439 isolates, we show that environmental bacterial populations are largely structured by ward and sink, with only a handful of lineages, such as ST635, being widely distributed, suggesting different prevailing ecologies, which may vary as a result of different inputs and selection pressures. Whole-genome sequencing of 46 contemporaneous patient isolates identified one (2 %; 95 % CI 0.05-11 %) urine infection-associated isolate with high similarity to a prior sink isolate, suggesting that sinks may contribute to up to 10 % of infections caused by these organisms in patients on the ward over the same timeframe. Using metagenomics from 20 sink-timepoints, we show that sinks also harbour many clinically relevant antimicrobial resistance genes including , and , and may act as niches for the exchange and amplification of these genes. Our study reinforces the potential role of sinks in contributing to Enterobacterales infection and antimicrobial resistance in hospital patients, something that could be amenable to intervention. This article contains data hosted by Microreact.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7478627PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000391DOI Listing

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