Occurrence of β-lactamase genes among non-Typhi Salmonella enterica isolated from humans, food animals, and retail meats in the United States and Canada
Autor: | Patrick Boerlin, Brea Duval, Regan Rickert, Shaohua Zhao, Karen Blickenstaff, Takiyah Ball, Paula J. Fedorka-Cray, Jovita Haro, Rebecca L. Howie, Gabhan Chalmers, Maria Sjölund-Karlsson, Jean M. Whichard |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
Microbiology (medical)
Salmonella Canada Meat medicine.drug_class Immunology Cephalosporin Microbial Sensitivity Tests Biology medicine.disease_cause Microbiology Polymerase Chain Reaction beta-Lactamases Antibiotic resistance Drug Resistance Bacterial medicine Animals Humans Serotyping Gene Pharmacology Broth microdilution Salmonella enterica biology.organism_classification Antimicrobial United States Anti-Bacterial Agents Cephalosporins Salmonella Infections Typhi salmonella |
Zdroj: | Microbial drug resistance (Larchmont, N.Y.). 19(3) |
ISSN: | 1931-8448 |
Popis: | Non-Typhi Salmonella cause over 1.7 million cases of gastroenteritis in North America each year, and food-animal products are commonly implicated in human infections. For invasive infections, antimicrobial therapy is indicated. In North America, the antimicrobial susceptibility of Salmonella is monitored by the U.S. National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS) and The Canadian Integrated Program for Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance (CIPARS). In this study, we determined the susceptibility to cephalosporins by broth microdilution among 5,041 non-Typhi Salmonella enterica isolated from food animals, retail meats, and humans. In the United States, 109 (4.6%) of isolates collected from humans, 77 (15.7%) from retail meat, and 140 (10.6%) from food animals displayed decreased susceptibility to cephalosporins (DSC). Among the Canadian retail meat and food animal isolates, 52 (13.0%) and 42 (9.4%) displayed DSC. All isolates displaying DSC were screened for β-lactamase genes (bla(TEM), bla(SHV), bla(CMY), bla(CTX-M), and bla(OXA-1)) by polymerase chain reaction. At least one β-lactamase gene was detected in 74/109 (67.9%) isolates collected from humans, and the bla(CMY) genes were most prevalent (69/109; 63.3%). Similarly, the bla(CMY) genes predominated among the β-lactamase-producing isolates collected from retail meats and food animals. Three isolates from humans harbored a bla(CTX-M-15) gene. No animal or retail meat isolates harbored a bla(CTX-M) or bla(OXA-1) gene. A bla(TEM) gene was found in 5 human, 9 retail meat, and 17 animal isolates. Although serotype distributions varied among human, retail meat, and animal sources, overlap in bla(CMY)-positive serotypes across sample sources supports meat and food-animal sources as reservoirs for human infection. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |