| Literature DB >> 31809529 |
Elisabetta Di Giannatale1, Paolo Calistri2, Guido Di Donato2,3, Lucia Decastelli4, Elisa Goffredo5, Daniela Adriano4, Maria Emanuela Mancini5, Annamaria Galleggiante4, Diana Neri1, Salvatore Antoci1, Cristina Marfoglia1, Francesca Marotta1, Roberta Nuvoloni3, Giacomo Migliorati1.
Abstract
Campylobacter species are common foodborne pathogens associated with cases of human gastroenteritis worldwide. A detailed understanding of the prevalence, contamination levels and molecular characteristics of Campylobacter spp. in cattle and chicken, which are likely the most important sources of human contamination, is imperative. A collection of 1243 poultry meat samples (665 chicken breasts and 578 chicken thighs) and 1203 bovine meat samples (689 hamburgers and 514 knife-cut meat preparations) were collected at retail outlets, in randomly selected supermarkets located in different Italian regions during one year. Of these samples, 17.38% of the poultry meat and 0.58% of the bovine meat samples tested positive for Campylobacter, of which 131 were Campylobacter jejuni (57.96%) and 95 were Campylobacter coli (42.03%). Campylobacter isolates were genotyped with the aim of assessing the genetic diversity, population structure, source distribution and Campylobacter transmission route to humans. All isolates were molecularly characterized by pulse field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), and further genotyped using multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and fla-SVR sequencing to gain better insight into the population structure. Antibiotic resistance was also investigate. The highest levels of resistance among chicken strains were observed for ciprofloxacin (88.25%), nalidixic acid (81.45%) and tetracycline (75.6%). PFGE analysis revealed 73 pulsotypes for C. jejuni and 54 pulsotypes for C. coli, demonstrating the existance of different and specific clones circulating in Italy. MLST of C.jejuni isolates mainly clustered in the CC353, CC354, CC21, CC206 and CC443; while C.coli isolates clustered only in CC828. The most common flaA alleles were 287 for C. jejuni and 66 for C. coli. Our study confirms that poultry meat is the main source of Campylobacteriosis, whereas red meat had a low level of contamination suggesting a minor role in transmission. The high presence of Campylobacter in retail chicken meat, paired with its increased resistance to antimicrobials with several multidrug resistance profiles detected, is alarming and represents a persistent threat to public health.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31809529 PMCID: PMC6897410 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0225957
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Campylobacter spp. prevalence in poultry meat and bovine meat preparations.
| Chicken samples | Tested samples | Positive samples | Prevalence (%) | 95% C.I. (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chicken thighs | 578 | 126 | 21.80 | 18.63–25.35 |
| Chicken breast | 665 | 90 | 13.53 | 11.15–16.35 |
| All poultry meat samples | 1243 | 216 | 17.38 | 15.37–19.58 |
| Hamburger | 689 | 4 | 0.58 | 0.24–1.48 |
| Italian traditional knife-cut meat preparation | 514 | 3 | 0.58 | 0.21–1.69 |
| Total | 1203 | 7 | 0.58 | 0.29–1.19 |
*carpaccio, Albese Knife-cut raw meat, salsiccia di Bra.
Parameters for the fitted distribution on the logarithmic values of the Campylobacter spp. contamination levels in poultry meat samples.
| Estimated parameters | Loglikelihood | Akaike information criterion (AIC) | Bayesian information criterion (BIC) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Distribution | Standard error | ||||
| Weibull | Shape = 2.185309 | 0.10398066 | -140.8012 | 285.6024 | 292.353 |
| Lognormal | Mean = -0.04043978 | 0.02715860 | -99.3765 | 202.753 | 209.5036 |
| Gamma | Shape = 5.699848 | 0.5331900 | -116.097 | 236.1941 | 242.9446 |
Breakpoint table for interpretation of MICs and percentage of Campylobacter isolates resistant to antimicrobials.
| Antimicrobials | species | MIC breackpoint (μg/mL) | Percentage of | Percentage of. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S | R | ||||
| Ciprofloxacin | ≤0.5 | >0.5 | 87.5% | 88,25% | |
| ≤0.5 | >0.5 | 89.01% | |||
| Erythromycin | ≤4 | >4 | 14.06% | 22,96% | |
| ≤8 | >8 | 31,86% | |||
| Gentamicin | ≤2 | >2 | 3.12% | 3.76% | |
| ≤2 | >2 | 4.4% | |||
| Nalidixic acid | ≤16 | >16 | 75% | 81.45% | |
| ≤16 | >16 | 87,91% | |||
| Streptomycin | ≤2 | >4 | 3.9% | 7.45% | |
| ≤2 | >4 | 10.99% | |||
| Tetracycline | ≤2 | >2 | 68.75% | 75.6% | |
| ≤2 | >2 | 82.42% | |||
S = sensible; R = resistant.
*statistically significant versus C. jejuni group (𝑃 ≤ 0.01, 𝜒2 test).