Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, Queen Mary Hospital and Carol Yu Centre for Infection, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Increasing consumption of nitrofurantoin (NIT) for treatment of acute uncomplicated urinary tract infections (UTI) highlights the need to monitor emerging NIT resistance mechanisms. This study investigated the molecular epidemiology of the multidrug-resistant efflux gene
oqxAB
and its contribution to nitrofurantoin resistance by using
Escherichia coli
isolates originating from patients with UTI (
n
= 205; collected in 2004 to 2013) and food-producing animals (
n
= 136; collected in 2012 to 2013) in Hong Kong. The
oqxAB
gene was highly prevalent among NIT-intermediate (11.5% to 45.5%) and -resistant (39.2% to 65.5%) isolates but rare (0% to 1.7%) among NIT-susceptible (NIT-S) isolates. In our isolates, the
oqxAB
gene was associated with IS
26
and was carried by plasmids of diverse replicon types. Multilocus sequence typing revealed that the clones of
oqxAB
-positive
E. coli
were diverse. The combination of
oqxAB
and
nfsA
mutations was found to be sufficient for high-level NIT resistance. Curing of
oqxAB
-carrying plasmids from 20 NIT-intermediate/resistant UTI isolates markedly reduced the geometric mean MIC of NIT from 168.9 μg/ml to 34.3 μg/ml. In the plasmid-cured variants, 20% (1/5) of isolates with
nfsA
mutations were NIT-S, while 80% (12/15) of isolates without
nfsA
mutations were NIT-S (
P
= 0.015). The presence of plasmid-based
oqxAB
increased the mutation prevention concentration of NIT from 128 μg/ml to 256 μg/ml and facilitated the development of clinically important levels of nitrofurantoin resistance. In conclusion, plasmid-mediated
oqxAB
is an important nitrofurantoin resistance mechanism. There is a great need to monitor the dissemination of this transferable multidrug-resistant efflux pump.
Funder
Consultancy Service for Enhancing Laboratory Surveillance of Emerging Infectious Disease for the Hong Kong SAR
FHB | Health and Medical Research Fund
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
61 articles.
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