AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzed the prevalence of intestinal bacteria that produce extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBL) and plasmid-mediated AmpC β-lactamase (AmpC) in healthy children in Ardabil, Iran, finding that 21.5% were ESBL carriers, while lower rates had AmpC or both.
  • The dominant bacterium identified was Escherichia coli, and most isolates were resistant to multiple antibiotics, including co-trimoxazole and tetracycline.
  • The research highlighted a concerning level of multidrug-resistant bacteria in the gut of healthy children, with a statistical link to class sizes impacting ESBL-PE intestinal carriage rates.

Article Abstract

This study aimed to determine the prevalence and risk factors associated with intestinal carriage of extended-spectrum β-lactamases producing (ESBL-PE) and plasmid-mediated AmpC β-lactamase producing (AmpC-PE) in healthy children in Ardabil, Iran. A total of 305 fecal samples were collected. Isolates underwent antimicrobial susceptibility testing, phenotypic and genotypic identification of β-lactamase production, and epidemiologic molecular typing. In total, 21.5%, 1.5%, and 1.2% of volunteers were extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL)-, AmpC-, and simultaneous ESBL/AmpC-PE carriers, respectively. was the predominant ESBL producing bacterium (70.2%) found in ESBL-PE colonized subjects. Beyond ESBL positive isolates, group genes were the most common type (75.6%) and (non- and non- ) were in the second place (25.6%). Among genes, (55.3%) and (55.3%) were the most predominant types with equal prevalence. Some isolates were multi-enzyme producers. and genes were common AmpC type enzyme encoding genes found in AmpC-PE isolates. Most isolates produced both enzymes at the same time. The number of students in the classes was statistically associated with ESBL-PE intestinal carriage ( < 0.05). Moreover, 46 (65.7%), 3 (60%), 4 (100%), and 98 (39.8%) ESBL-, AmpC-, ESBL/AmpC, and non-ESBL/AmpC-PE isolates were multidrug-resistant, respectively. Overall, regardless of β-lactam antibiotics, 62% and 59.5% of isolates were resistant to co-trimoxazole and tetracycline, respectively. The majority of ESBL producing isolates (69.2%) belonged to phylogroup A. According to Enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus polymerase chain reaction, there was no clonal relatedness between isolates. This study showed a high rate of multi-resistant ESBL-PE intestinal carriage among healthy individuals in Iran.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/mdr.2021.0029DOI Listing

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