4.6 Article

Acquisition of plasmid-mediated cephalosporinase producing Enterobacteriaceae after a travel to the tropics

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 13, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0206909

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale (Equipe FRM 2016) [DEQ20161136698]

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Travelers are at high risk of acquiring multi-drug resistant Enterobacteriaceae (MRE) while traveling abroad. Acquisition of extended spectrum beta-lactamase producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-E) while traveling has been extensively described, but not that of plasmid-mediated cephalosporinase producing Enterobacteriaceae (pAmpC-E). Here, we characterized the pAmpC-E acquired in 574 French travelers to tropical areas enrolled in the VOYAG-R study. Among the 526 MRE isolated at return, 57 (10.8%) from 49 travelers were pAmpC-E. The acquisition rate of pAmpC-E was 8.5% (49/574) ranging from 12.8% (25/195) in Asia, 7.6% (14/184) in Latin America to 5.1% (10/195) in Africa. The highest acquisition rates were observed in Peru (21.9%), India (21.4%) and Vietnam (20%). The carriage of pAmpC-E decreased quickly after return with 92.5% of colonized travelers being negative at one month. Most enzymes were CMY types (96.5%, n = 55, only met in Escherichia coli), including 40 CMY-2 (70.2%), 12 CMY-42 (21.1%), 1 CMY-6 and two new CMY-2 variants. The remaining were two DHA observed in Klebsiella pneumoniae. CMY-2 producing strains were acquired worldwide whereas CMY-42, except for one, were all acquired in Asia. Bla(CMY-2) genes were associated with different plasmid types, including Incl1 (45.2%), IncF (10%), IncF-Incl (7.5%), IncA/C (5%) and IncR (2.5%) whereas bla(CMY-42) were all associated with Incl1 plasmids. Even though the pAmpC-E acquisition rate was much lower than that of ESBL-E, it was significant, especially in Asia, showing that pAmpC-E, especially CMY-type producing E. coli have spread in the community settings of tropical regions.

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