High burden and diversity of carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales observed in wastewater of a tertiary care hospital in Germany

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@article{d2161830f59341f2b960174e5c90c825,
title = "High burden and diversity of carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales observed in wastewater of a tertiary care hospital in Germany",
abstract = "Hospitals are one of the main reservoirs of multi-resistant Enterobacterales (MRE). As MRE are resistant to the most frequently used antibiotics, therapy for patients with MRE infections is challenging. It has been previously described that MRE from hospital wastewater can pass into municipal wastewater and even surface water. In this study, we investigated the diversity and epidemiology of MRE in the wastewater of a large tertiary care hospital. Wastewater samples were collected for a four-day period and tested for the presence of Enterobacterales resistant to 3rd gen. cephalosporins. Representative isolates were further characterized by whole genome sequencing. In 120 β-glucuronidase-producing isolates, 68 Escherichia coli and, interestingly, also 52 Citrobacter freundii were identified. In 120 β-glucosidase-producing isolates 45 Serratia marcescens, 34 Klebsiella oxytoca, 32 Enterobacter cloacae and 9 Klebsiella pneumoniae were observed. For all species various MLST sequence types and different clusters of resistance genes were determined, showing a great diversity within the different Enterobacterales, further corroborated by clonal analysis performed by cgMLST. The most prominent clone was wastewater associated E. coli ST635, which accounted for 47.1% of all E. coli isolates. Interestingly, 45.6% of E. coli, 88.5% of C. freundii, 95.6% of S. marcescens, 91.2% of K. oxytoca, 96.9% of E. cloacae and 88.9% of K. pneumoniae isolates carried a carbapenemase gene, indicating a high burden with carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales. Comparison with clinical isolates from the same hospital displayed few clonal matches. One wastewater isolate of K. pneumoniae was identified to be closely related compared to a clone that had been introduced into the hospital during an outbreak four years earlier. One E. coli isolate was identified as identical to an isolate from a patient, with inpatient stay during the sampling period. The data obtained in this study highlight the problem of antibiotic resistance of Enterobacterales in hospital wastewater. In particular, the clustered occurrence of carbapenemase genes is of great concern and underscores the problem of increasingly scarce antibiotic options against these bacteria.",
keywords = "Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology, Bacterial Proteins/genetics, Escherichia coli/genetics, Humans, Klebsiella pneumoniae/genetics, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Multilocus Sequence Typing, Tertiary Care Centers, Waste Water, beta-Lactamases",
author = "Laura Carlsen and Henning B{\"u}ttner and Martin Christner and Gefion Franke and Daniela Indenbirken and Birte Knobling and Marc L{\"u}tgehetmann and Johannes Knobloch",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier GmbH.. All rights reserved.",
year = "2022",
month = may,
doi = "10.1016/j.ijheh.2022.113968",
language = "English",
volume = "242",
journal = "INT J HYG ENVIR HEAL",
issn = "1438-4639",
publisher = "Urban und Fischer Verlag Jena",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - High burden and diversity of carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales observed in wastewater of a tertiary care hospital in Germany

AU - Carlsen, Laura

AU - Büttner, Henning

AU - Christner, Martin

AU - Franke, Gefion

AU - Indenbirken, Daniela

AU - Knobling, Birte

AU - Lütgehetmann, Marc

AU - Knobloch, Johannes

N1 - Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier GmbH.. All rights reserved.

PY - 2022/5

Y1 - 2022/5

N2 - Hospitals are one of the main reservoirs of multi-resistant Enterobacterales (MRE). As MRE are resistant to the most frequently used antibiotics, therapy for patients with MRE infections is challenging. It has been previously described that MRE from hospital wastewater can pass into municipal wastewater and even surface water. In this study, we investigated the diversity and epidemiology of MRE in the wastewater of a large tertiary care hospital. Wastewater samples were collected for a four-day period and tested for the presence of Enterobacterales resistant to 3rd gen. cephalosporins. Representative isolates were further characterized by whole genome sequencing. In 120 β-glucuronidase-producing isolates, 68 Escherichia coli and, interestingly, also 52 Citrobacter freundii were identified. In 120 β-glucosidase-producing isolates 45 Serratia marcescens, 34 Klebsiella oxytoca, 32 Enterobacter cloacae and 9 Klebsiella pneumoniae were observed. For all species various MLST sequence types and different clusters of resistance genes were determined, showing a great diversity within the different Enterobacterales, further corroborated by clonal analysis performed by cgMLST. The most prominent clone was wastewater associated E. coli ST635, which accounted for 47.1% of all E. coli isolates. Interestingly, 45.6% of E. coli, 88.5% of C. freundii, 95.6% of S. marcescens, 91.2% of K. oxytoca, 96.9% of E. cloacae and 88.9% of K. pneumoniae isolates carried a carbapenemase gene, indicating a high burden with carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales. Comparison with clinical isolates from the same hospital displayed few clonal matches. One wastewater isolate of K. pneumoniae was identified to be closely related compared to a clone that had been introduced into the hospital during an outbreak four years earlier. One E. coli isolate was identified as identical to an isolate from a patient, with inpatient stay during the sampling period. The data obtained in this study highlight the problem of antibiotic resistance of Enterobacterales in hospital wastewater. In particular, the clustered occurrence of carbapenemase genes is of great concern and underscores the problem of increasingly scarce antibiotic options against these bacteria.

AB - Hospitals are one of the main reservoirs of multi-resistant Enterobacterales (MRE). As MRE are resistant to the most frequently used antibiotics, therapy for patients with MRE infections is challenging. It has been previously described that MRE from hospital wastewater can pass into municipal wastewater and even surface water. In this study, we investigated the diversity and epidemiology of MRE in the wastewater of a large tertiary care hospital. Wastewater samples were collected for a four-day period and tested for the presence of Enterobacterales resistant to 3rd gen. cephalosporins. Representative isolates were further characterized by whole genome sequencing. In 120 β-glucuronidase-producing isolates, 68 Escherichia coli and, interestingly, also 52 Citrobacter freundii were identified. In 120 β-glucosidase-producing isolates 45 Serratia marcescens, 34 Klebsiella oxytoca, 32 Enterobacter cloacae and 9 Klebsiella pneumoniae were observed. For all species various MLST sequence types and different clusters of resistance genes were determined, showing a great diversity within the different Enterobacterales, further corroborated by clonal analysis performed by cgMLST. The most prominent clone was wastewater associated E. coli ST635, which accounted for 47.1% of all E. coli isolates. Interestingly, 45.6% of E. coli, 88.5% of C. freundii, 95.6% of S. marcescens, 91.2% of K. oxytoca, 96.9% of E. cloacae and 88.9% of K. pneumoniae isolates carried a carbapenemase gene, indicating a high burden with carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales. Comparison with clinical isolates from the same hospital displayed few clonal matches. One wastewater isolate of K. pneumoniae was identified to be closely related compared to a clone that had been introduced into the hospital during an outbreak four years earlier. One E. coli isolate was identified as identical to an isolate from a patient, with inpatient stay during the sampling period. The data obtained in this study highlight the problem of antibiotic resistance of Enterobacterales in hospital wastewater. In particular, the clustered occurrence of carbapenemase genes is of great concern and underscores the problem of increasingly scarce antibiotic options against these bacteria.

KW - Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology

KW - Bacterial Proteins/genetics

KW - Escherichia coli/genetics

KW - Humans

KW - Klebsiella pneumoniae/genetics

KW - Microbial Sensitivity Tests

KW - Multilocus Sequence Typing

KW - Tertiary Care Centers

KW - Waste Water

KW - beta-Lactamases

U2 - 10.1016/j.ijheh.2022.113968

DO - 10.1016/j.ijheh.2022.113968

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 35390565

VL - 242

JO - INT J HYG ENVIR HEAL

JF - INT J HYG ENVIR HEAL

SN - 1438-4639

M1 - 113968

ER -