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Community-onset Escherichia coli infection resistant to expanded- spectrum cephalosporins in low-prevalence countries

journal contribution
posted on 2014-01-01, 00:00 authored by B Rogers, P Ingram, N Runnegar, M Pitman, J Freeman, Eugene AthanEugene Athan, S Havers, H Sidjabat, M Jones, E Gunning, M De Almeida, K Styles, D Paterson
Background
By global standards the prevalence of community onset expanded-spectrum cephalosporin resistant Escherichia coli (ESC-R-EC) remains low in Australia and New Zealand. Of concern, our countries are in a unique position with high extramural resistance pressure from close population and trade links to Asia-Pacific neighbours with high ESC-R-EC rates. We aim to characterize the risks and dynamics of community onset ESC-R-EC in our low-prevalence region.

Methods
A case-control methodology was used. Patients with ESC-R-EC or susceptible E. coli isolated from blood or urine were recruited at six geographically dispersed tertiary hospitals in Australia and New Zealand. Epidemiological data was prospectively collected and bacteria were retained for analysis.

Results
In total, 182 patients (91 cases and 91 controls) were recruited. Multivariate logistic regression identified risk factors for ESC-R amongst E. coli including birth on the Indian subcontinent (OR=11.13, 2.17-56.98, p=0.003), urinary tract infection in the past year (per infection OR=1.430, 1.13-1.82, p=0.003), travel to South East Asia, China, Indian subcontinent, Africa and the Middle East (OR=3.089, 1.29-7.38, p=0.011), prior exposure to trimethoprim+/-sulfamethoxazole &/or an expanded-spectrum cephalosporin (OR=3.665, 1.30-10.35, p=0.014) and healthcare exposure in the previous six months (OR=3.16, 1.54-6.46, p=0.02).

Amongst our ESC-R-EC the blaCTX-M ESBLs was dominant (83% of ESC-R-EC), and the worldwide pandemic clone ST-131 was frequent (45% of ESC-R-EC).

Conclusion
In our low prevalence setting, ESC-R amongst community onset E. coli may be associated with both ‘export’ from healthcare facilities into the community and direct ‘import’ into the community from high-prevalence regions.

History

Journal

Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy

Volume

58

Issue

4

Pagination

2126 - 2134

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Location

Washington, DC

ISSN

0066-4804

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal