4.5 Article

Transmission routes of antibiotic resistant bacteria: a systematic review

Journal

BMC INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12879-022-07360-z

Keywords

Antibiotic resistance; Antibiotic resistant bacteria; Transmission; Systematic review; Escherichia coli; Staphylococcus aureus; Enterobacteriaceae

Funding

  1. One Health European Joint Programme by the EU's Horizon-2020 Research and Innovation Programme [773830]

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This study systematically reviewed estimated contributions of antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) acquisition routes in humans, animals, water, and the environment, and found that despite the abundance of data, the relative importance of transmission routes of ARB has not been accurately quantified due to lack of exposure frequency information.
Background Quantification of acquisition routes of antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) is pivotal for understanding transmission dynamics and designing cost-effective interventions. Different methods have been used to quantify the importance of transmission routes, such as relative risks, odds ratios (OR), genomic comparisons and basic reproduction numbers. We systematically reviewed reported estimates on acquisition routes' contributions of ARB in humans, animals, water and the environment and assessed the methods used to quantify the importance of transmission routes. Methods PubMed and EMBASE were searched, resulting in 6054 articles published up until January 1st, 2019. Full text screening was performed on 525 articles and 277 are included. Results We extracted 718 estimates with S. aureus (n = 273), E. coli (n = 157) and Enterobacteriaceae (n = 99) being studied most frequently. Most estimates were derived from statistical methods (n = 560), mainly expressed as risks (n = 246) and ORs (n = 239), followed by genetic comparisons (n = 85), modelling (n = 62) and dosage of ARB ingested (n = 17). Transmission routes analysed most frequently were occupational exposure (n = 157), travelling (n = 110) and contacts with carriers (n = 83). Studies were mostly performed in the United States (n = 142), the Netherlands (n = 87) and Germany (n = 60). Comparison of methods was not possible as studies using different methods to estimate the same route were lacking. Due to study heterogeneity not all estimates by the same method could be pooled. Conclusion Despite an abundance of published data the relative importance of transmission routes of ARB has not been accurately quantified. Links between exposure and acquisition are often present, but the frequency of exposure is missing, which disables estimation of transmission routes' importance. To create effective policies reducing ARB, estimates of transmission should be weighed by the frequency of exposure occurrence.

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