| Literature DB >> 29659796 |
Heike Müller1, Esther Sib2, Mike Gajdiss2, Ursula Klanke2, Franziska Lenz-Plet2, Vanessa Barabasch2, Cathrin Albert2, Anna Schallenberg2, Christian Timm1, Nicole Zacharias1, Ricarda Maria Schmithausen1, Steffen Engelhart1, Martin Exner1, Marijo Parcina2, Christiane Schreiber1, Gabriele Bierbaum2.
Abstract
Carbapenem antibiotics constitute the mainstay therapy of nosocomial infections with extended spectrum beta-lactamase producing Gram-negative bacteria; however, resistance against these compounds is increasing. This study was designed to demonstrate that carbapenemase-producing bacteria are disseminated from hospitals into the environment. To this end, resistant bacteria were isolated from a clinical/urban and from a rural catchment system in Germany in 2016/17. The study followed the dissemination of resistant bacteria from the wastewater through the wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) into the receiving surface waters. The bacteria were cultivated on selective agar and characterized by antibiotic testing, real-time PCR targeting carbapenemase genes and typing. Bacteria with resistance to third generation cephalosporins were isolated from all sample sites. 134 isolates harboring carbapenemase genes encoding VIM, NDM and OXA-48 and 26 XDR (extensively drug-resistant) strains with susceptibility to only one or two antibiotics were isolated from the clinical/urban system. The rural system yielded eight carbapenemase producers and no XDR strains. In conclusion, clinical wastewaters were charged with a high proportion of multidrug resistant bacteria. Although most of these bacteria were eliminated during wastewater treatment, dissemination into surface waters is possible as single carbapenemase producers were still present in the effluent of the WWTP.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29659796 DOI: 10.1093/femsec/fiy057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FEMS Microbiol Ecol ISSN: 0168-6496 Impact factor: 4.194