| Literature DB >> 33834207 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antibiotics are no longer the primary approach for treating all travellers' diarrhoea (TD): most cases resolve without antibiotics and using them predisposes to colonization by multidrug-resistant bacteria. Data are accumulating on increasing resistance among TD pathogens, yet research into the most common agents, diarrhoeagenic Escherichia coli (DEC), remains limited.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial resistance; ESBL; azithromycin; fluoroquinolone; multidrug resistance; rifamixin; travelers`diarrhea
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 33834207 PMCID: PMC8763120 DOI: 10.1093/jtm/taab042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Travel Med ISSN: 1195-1982 Impact factor: 8.490
Figure 1Flow chart of prospective study of ESBL-EC (extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Escherichia coli) rates among DEC (diarrhoeagenic E. coli) of various pathotypes. Abbreviations: EAEC—enteroaggregative E. coli, EPEC—enteropathogenic E. coli, ETEC—enterotoxigenic E. coli, EIEC—enteroinvasive E. coli, EHEC enterohaemorrhagic E. coli or STEC—shiga-toxin-producing (STEC) E. coli.
Demographics of 13 prospectively recruited travellers who contracted extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing diarrhoeagenic Escherichia coli (ESBL-DEC) during visits to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs)
| Age (years) | Gender | Type of ESBL-DEC | Concomitant other ESBL-PE | AB use | TD | Travel destination(s) | Length of travel (days) | Non-ESBL co-pathogens |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 23 | Male | EAEC | No | Yes | Laos, Cambodia, | 22 | None | |
| 31 | Female | EPEC | No | Yes | India | 11 | EAEC, | |
| 61 | Female | EPEC | FQ | Yes | China | 12 | ETEC | |
| 56 | Female | EAEC | No | Yes | India | 7 | EPEC | |
| 67 | Male | EAEC | No | No | Egypt, Jordan | 7 | None | |
| 24 | Female | EAEC | No | Yes | Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam | 110 | EPEC, | |
| 46 | Female | EAEC | Non-DEC | No | Yes | Cambodia | 19 | EPEC |
| 47 | Male | EAEC | No | Yes | India | 16 | EHEC | |
| 22 | Female | ETEC | No | Yes | India | 14 | EPEC | |
| 20 | Male | EAEC |
| FQ | Yes | India | 16 | EPEC, |
| 31 | Male | EAEC | No | Yes | India | 27 | EPEC | |
| 25 | Male | EAEC |
| No | Yes | India | 32 | EPEC |
| 59 | Male | EAEC | No | Yes | India | 13 | EPEC |
Data are provided for concomitant other ESBL-producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-PE), antibiotic (AB) use, travellers’ diarrhoea (TD), destination, length of travel and non-ESBL-PE co-pathogens.
Proportions of ESBL-producing Escherichia coli (ESBL-EC) among all DEC in samples from 413 travellers visiting LMICs
| n/all 90 ESBL-EC | ESBL-DEC /all respective DEC | TD | South Asia | South East Asia | East Asia | North Africa and Middle East | Sub-Saharan Africa | Latin America | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ESBL-DEC | ESBL-DEC | ESBL-DEC | ESBL-DEC | ESBL-DEC | ESBL-DEC | ||||
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| EAEC | 10 (11.1) | 10/175 (5.7) | 9 (90.0) | 6/33 (18.2) | 3/33 (9.1) | 0/1 (0.0) | 1/3 (33.3) | 0/90 (0.0) | 0/15 (0.0) |
| EPEC | 2 (2.2) | 2/180 (1.1) | 2 (100.0) | 1/30 (3.3) | 0/44 (0.0) | 1/2 (50.0) | 0/4 (0.0) | 0/83 (0.0) | 0/17 (0.0) |
| ETEC | 1 (1.1) | 1/80 (1.3) | 1 (100.0) | 1/12 (8.3) | 0/19 (0.0) | 0/0 (0.0) | 0/0 (0.0) | 0/45 (0.0) | 0/4 (0.0) |
| Total | 13 (14.4) | 13/475 (2.7) | 12 (92.3) | 8 (62.0) | 3 (23.1) | 1 (7.7) | 1 (7.7) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
aESBL producers (n) among all EAEC/EPEC/ETEC/DEC of 413 travellers (%)
bamong 13 travellers with ESBL-DEC
cESBL producers (n) among all EAEC/EPEC/ETEC/DEC in samples of travellers to region (%)
DEC were determined by multiplex qPCR directly from stools; positive result was interpreted as one strain. ESBL-DEC were identified by qPCR analysis of isolates initially obtained by culture. Table shows prevalences of various ESBL-DEC among all DEC strains (total = 475) of same type plus geographic origin as judged from stools of travellers visiting each region
Results of literature search for traveller studies exploring antibiotic resistance among various DEC
| First author | Year(s) of stool sampling | Population, number of isolates | ESBL-EC | Cipro-floxacin resistance | Azithro-mycin resistance | Rifaximin resistance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lurchachaiwong | 2013–17 | US military, Thailand | Only resistance to ceftriaxone tested 0% | ETEC 0% | NT | NT |
| Murphy | 2012–14 | Travellers in Nepal | NT | ETEC 23% | ETEC 22% | NT |
| Guiral | 2011–17 | TD Spain | ETEC 14% | ETEC 33% | ETEC 29% | ETEC 0% |
| Margulieux | 2001–16 | Locals and travellers, Kathmandu, Nepal | ETEC 15% | ETEC 6% | NT | NT |
| Mason | 2002–04 | US military, Thailand | NT | ETEC: 0% | ETEC: 0% | NT |
| Jennings | 2003–10 | Language school travellers, Cuzco, Peru | ETEC 0% | ETEC: 0% | ETEC: 22% | NT |
| Pandey | 2001–03 | Travellers and expatriates, Nepal | NT | ETEC 0% EPEC10% | ETEC 16% | NT |
| Guiral | 2005–06 | Spanish travellers to India with TD | EAEC 10% | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Ouyang-Latimer | 2006–08 | TD among travellers to Mexico, Guatemala, India | Resistance to ceftriaxone | India | India | India |
| Porter | 2002 | US military, Turkey | NT | ETEC 5% | Not reported | NT |
| Mendez | 1994–97 and | Spanish travellers | NT | 1994–97 | NT | NT |
| Gomi | 1997 | Travellers to India, Mexico, Jamaica, Kenya | a | India | a | a |
| Vila | 1994–97 | Spanish travellers | NT | ETEC 1% | NT | NT |
aResistance rates for ETEC and EAEC only provided together; cases with both reported as ‘highly sensitive’.
Some studies were conducted among both travellers and locals in LMICs. Table combines results from analyses of ESBL-DEC and resistance to TD antibiotics, fluoroquinolones, azithromycin, and rifaximin. Three studies only report resistance rates to third-generation cephalosporins but not ESBL-DEC (NT = not tested).
Results of literature search for studies exploring rates of ESBL producers among various DEC isolated from stools of locals in various regions in LMICs
| First author year | Year(s) of stool sampling | Population, number of isolates | ESBL-EC | Carbapenem resistance | Ciprofloxacin resistance | Azithromycin resistance | Rifaximin resistance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| South Asia | |||||||
| Moharana | 2012–17 | Indian children with diarrhoea | 4% | 3% | 74% | NT | NT |
| Mandal | not reported (“during | Indian children with diarrhoea | All DEC 38% | 0% | DEC 50% | NT | NT |
| Khalil | 2010–11 | Pakistani children with diarrhoea EAEC 35 | 34% | NT | 69% | NT | NT |
| Younas | 2010–12 | Pakistani children EPEC 46 | 59% | NT | 39% | NT | NT |
| Malvi | 2012–13 | Indian children with/without diarrhoea | 25% | 30% | 25% | 14% | NT |
| Southeast Asia | |||||||
| Our search yielded no studies conducted in the Southeast Asia | |||||||
| East Asia | |||||||
| Xu | 2006–15 | Chinese patients with diarrhoea | 25% | 0% | 5% | NT | NT |
| Zhou | 2015–16 | Chinese children with diarrhoea | 52% | 6% | 50% | NT | NT |
| Wang | 2015 | Chinese healthy elderly (>65 years) | 56% | NT | NT | NT | NT |
| North Africa and Middle East | |||||||
| Farajzadeh-Sheikh | 2016–17 | Iranian children | EIEC 69% | EIEC 15% | 0% | NT | NT |
| Eltai | 2017–18 | Quatarian children | EAEC; 20% | EAEC; 10% | 0% | NT | NT |
| Taghadosi | 2014–15 | Iranian children | ETEC 54% | 0% | ETEC 46% | NT | NT |
| Mahdavi | 2015–16 | Iranian children with diarrhoea | ETEC 100% | (Imipenem) | ETEC 17% | NT | NT |
| Amin | 2015–16 | Iranian children with diarrhoea | 28% | 9% resistant to meropenem; 0% to imipenem | 19% | 78% | NT |
| Aminshahidi | 2014–15 | Iranian children | DEC 67% | 0% | DEC 31% | NT | NT |
| Karami | Not reported | Iranian children with/without diarrhoea | 80% | 0% | 21% | NT | NT |
| Memariani 2015 | 2011–13 | Iranian children with diarrhoea | 21% | NT | 17% | NT | NT |
| Ghorbani-Dalini 2015 | 2010 | Iranian adults with diarrhoea | 13% | 6% resistant to imipenem | 8% | NT | NT |
| Khoshvaght 2014 | 2011–12 | Iranian children with diarrhoea | 53% | 4% resistant to imipenem | 16% | NT | NT |
| Sonnevend 2006 | 2003–04 | children and adults with and without diarrhoea, United Arab Emirates | 11% | NT | NT | NT | NT |
| Sub-Saharan Africa | |||||||
| Konate | 2013–15 | children with diarrhoea, Burkina Faso | 68% | 16% resistant to imipenem | 0% | NT | NT |
| South and Central America and the Caribbean | |||||||
| Amaya | 2005–06 | Nicaraguan children | diarrhoea: | 0% | 1% | NT | NT |
From the same papers, resistance rates are given also for carbapenems, fluoroquinolones, azithromycin and rifaximin, if tested (NT = not tested).