Temporal Dynamics of Genetically Heterogeneous Extended-Spectrum Cephalosporin Resistant Escherichia coli Bloodstream Infections.

Autor: Shropshire WC, Strope B, Anand SS, Bremer J, McDaneld P, Bhatti MM, Flores AR, Kalia A, Shelburne SA
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology [bioRxiv] 2023 Apr 11. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Apr 11.
DOI: 10.1101/2023.02.07.527510
Abstrakt: Extended-spectrum cephalosporin resistant Escherichia coli (ESC-R- Ec ) is an urgent public health threat with sequence type clonal complex 131 (STc131), phylogroup B2 strains being particularly concerning as the dominant cause of ESC-R- Ec infections. To address the paucity of recent ESC-R- Ec molecular epidemiology data in the United States, we used whole genome sequencing (WGS) to fully characterize a large cohort of invasive ESC-R- Ec at a tertiary care cancer center in Houston, Texas collected from 2016-2020. During the study timeframe, there were 1154 index E. coli bloodstream infections (BSIs) of which 389 (33.7%) were ESC-R- Ec . Using time series analyses, we identified a temporal dynamic of ESC-R- Ec distinct from ESC-susceptible E. coli (ESC-S- Ec ), with cases peaking in the last six months of the calendar year. WGS of 297 ESC-R- Ec strains revealed that while STc131 strains accounted for ∼45% of total BSIs, the proportion of STc131 strains remained stable across the study time frame with infection peaks driven by genetically heterogeneous ESC-R- Ec clonal complexes. Bla CTX-M variants accounted for most β-lactamases conferring the ESC-R phenotype (89%; 220/248 index ESC-R -Ec ), and amplification of bla CTX-M genes was widely detected in ESC-R- Ec strains, particularly in carbapenem non-susceptible, recurrent BSI strains. Bla CTX-M-55 was significantly enriched within phylogroup A strains, and we identified bla CTX-M-55 plasmid-to-chromosome transmission occurring across non-B2 strains. Our data provide important information regarding the current molecular epidemiology of invasive ESC-R- Ec infections at a large tertiary care cancer center and provide novel insights into the genetic basis of observed temporal variability for these clinically important pathogens.
Importance: Given that E. coli is the leading cause of worldwide ESC-R Enterobacterales infections, we sought to assess the current molecular epidemiology of ESC-R- Ec using a WGS analysis of many BSIs over a five-year period. We identified fluctuating temporal dynamics of ESC-R- Ec infections, which has also recently been identified in other geographical regions such as Israel. Our WGS data allowed us to visualize the stable nature of STc131 over the study period and demonstrate a limited, but genetically diverse group of ESC-R- Ec clonal complexes are detected during infection peaks. Additionally, we provide a widespread assessment of β-lactamase gene copy number in ESC-R- Ec infections and delineate mechanisms by which such amplifications are achieved in a diverse array of ESC-R- Ec strains. These data suggest that serious ESC-R- Ec infections are driven by a diverse array of strains in our cohort and impacted by environmental factors suggesting that community-based monitoring could inform novel preventative measures.
Databáze: MEDLINE