Author:
Mohapatra Sarita,Ghosh Dipannita,Vivekanandan Perumal,Chunchanur Sneha,Venugopal Shwetha,Tak Vibhor,Panigrahy Rajashree,Chaudhuri Susmita,Pundir Swati,Sharma Tanya,Kocher Deepak,Singh Harpreet,Gautam Hitender,Sood Seema,Das Bimal Kumar,Kapil Arti,Kumar Arvind,Kumari Rajesh,Kalaivani Mani,Rangaiah Ambica,Salve Harshal Ramesh,Malhotra Sumit,Kant Shashi,Hari Pankaj,Mohapatra Sarita,Sneha K. C.,Shwetha J. V.,Tak Vibhor,Panigrahy Rajashree,Chaudhuri Susmita,
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Urinary tract infection (UTI) in children is a common bacterial infection. The emergence of extended-spectrum beta-lactamases (ESBLs) poses a major challenge against the treatment of uropathogens. We aimed to characterize the E. coli isolates recovered from children with UTI for their resistance profile and circulating sequence types (ST).
Methods
Children (> 1.5–18 years of age) from different community health centres of India with symptoms of UTI were enrolled. Isolates causing significant bacteriuria were identified by Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) and tested for antimicrobial susceptibility by the automated system, VITEK-2 (Biomeriux, Durhum, US). Nineteen E. coli isolates (15 ESBL positive and 4 ESBL negative) were sequenced in Oxford Nanopore platform followed by core-genome phylogeny, accessory genome cluster analysis, identification of sequence types, mobile genetic elements, genetic antimicrobial resistance markers. The correlation between detection of antimicrobial resistance genes with phenotypic resistance profiles was also investigated.
Results
Eleven percent of children had significant bacteriuria [male:female—1:1, > 50% were 11–18 years of age group]. E. coli was predominant (86%) followed by K. pneumoniae (11%). Susceptibility of E. coli was highest against fosfomycin (100%) followed by carbapenems (90.7%) and nitrofurantoin (88.8%). ST131 (15.8%) and ST167 (10.5%) found as high-risk clones with the presence of plasmid [IncFIB (63.1%), IncFIA (52.6%)], and composite transposon [Tn2680 (46.6%)] in many isolates. Few isolates coharboured multiple beta-lactamases including blaNDM-5 (33.3%), blaOXA-1 (53.3%), blaCTX-M-15 (60%) and blaTEM-4 (60%).
Conclusions
This study highlights horizontal transmission of resistance genes and plasmids in paediatric patients at community centers across the nation harbouring multidrug-resistant genes such as blaNDM-5 and blaCTX-M-15 associated with high-risk clones ST131 and ST167. The data is alarming and emphasizes the need for rapid identification of resistance markers to reduce the spread in community. To our knowledge, this is the first multicentric study targeting paediatric UTI patients from the community setting of India.
Funder
Indian Council of Medical Research
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
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