High prevalence of carriage of mcr-1-positive enteric bacteria among healthy children from rural communities in the Chaco region, Bolivia, september to october 2016
- Creators
- Tommaso Giani
- SENNATI, SAMANTA
- Alberto Antonelli
- Vincenzo Di Pilato
- Tiziana di Maggio
- Antonia Mantella
- Claudia Niccolai
- SPINICCI, MICHELE
- Joaquín Monasterio
- Paul Castellanos
- Mirtha Martinez
- Fausto Contreras
- Dorian Balderrama Villaroel
- Esther Damiani
- Sdenka Maury
- Rodolfo Rocabado
- Lucia Pallecchi
- BARTOLONI, ALESSANDRO
- Gian Maria Rossolini
- Others:
- Giani, Tommaso
- Samanta, Sennati
- Antonelli, Alberto
- DI PILATO, Vincenzo
- di Maggio, Tiziana
- Mantella, Antonia
- Niccolai, Claudia
- Michele, Spinicci
- Monasterio, Joaquín
- Castellanos, Paul
- Martinez, Mirtha
- Contreras, Fausto
- Balderrama Villaroel, Dorian
- Damiani, Esther
- Maury, Sdenka
- Rocabado, Rodolfo
- Pallecchi, Lucia
- Alessandro, Bartoloni
- Maria Rossolini, Gian
Description
Background: The mcr-1 gene is a transferable resistance determinant against colistin, a last-resort anti-microbial for infections caused by multi-resistant Gram-negatives. Aim: To study carriage of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in healthy school children as part of a helminth control and antimicrobial resistance survey in the Bolivian Chaco region. Methods: From September to October 2016 we collected faecal samples from healthy children in eight rural villages. Samples were screened for mcr-1-and mcr-2 genes. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing was performed, and a subset of 18 isolates representative of individuals from different villages was analysed by whole genome sequencing (WGS). Results: We included 337 children (mean age: 9.2 years, range: 7–11; 53% females). The proportion of mcr-1 carriers was high (38.3%) and present in all villages; only four children had previous antibiotic exposure. One or more mcr-1-positive isolates were recovered from 129 positive samples, yielding a total of 173 isolates (171 Escherichia coli, 1 Citrobacter europaeus, 1 Enterobacter hormaechei). No mcr-2 was detected. Co-resistance to other antimicrobials varied in mcr-positive E. coli. All 171 isolates were susceptible to carbapenems and tigecycline; 41 (24.0%) were extended-spectrum β-lactamase producers and most of them (37/41) carried bla CTX - M -type genes. WGS revealed heterogeneity of clonal lineages and mcr-genetic supports. Conclusion: This high prevalence of mcr-1-like carriage, in absence of professional exposure, is unexpected. Its extent at the national level should be investigated with priority. Possible causes should be studied; they may include unrestricted use of colistin in veterinary medicine and animal breeding, and importation of mcr-1-positive bacteria via food and animals.
Additional details
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/1011251
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1011251
- Origin repository
- UNIGE