Antibiotic use and hygiene interact to influence the distribution of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria in low-income communities in Guatemala

Author:

Ramay Brooke M.,Caudell Mark A.,Cordón-Rosales Celia,Archila L. Diego,Palmer Guy H.,Jarquin Claudia,Moreno Purificación,McCracken John P.,Rosenkrantz Leah,Amram Ofer,Omulo Sylvia,Call Douglas R.

Abstract

AbstractTo examine the effects of poor sanitation and hygiene on the prevalence of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria, we surveyed households in two rural and two urban communities in Guatemala (N = 196 randomly selected households). One adult (≥ 18-years old) and, when available, one child (≤ 5 years-old) provided a stool sample. Up to 48 presumptive Escherichia coli isolates were collected from each stool sample (n = 21,256 total) and were subjected to breakpoint assays for ten antibiotics. Mixed-effects logistic models were used to identify potential factors influencing the likelihood of harboring antibiotic-resistant bacteria. For nine out of ten antibiotics, the odds of detecting resistant bacteria decreased by ~ 32% (odds ratios, OR 0.53–0.8, P < 0.001) for every unit of improvement of a hygiene scale. Hygiene differences between households had a greater impact on prevalence compared to antibiotic use differences. The likelihood of detecting resistant isolates was lower for five antibiotics among households that boiled raw milk before consumption (OR 0.31–0.69), and higher for nine antibiotics in urban households (OR > 1.89–9.6). Poor hygiene conditions likely obscure effects of individual antibiotic use, presumably due to enhanced microbial transmission. Consequently, efforts to improve antibiotic stewardship should be coupled with improving hygiene conditions.

Funder

Paul G. Allen School for Global Animal Health

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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