Prevalence and molecular epidemiology of carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales isolated from dog and cat faeces submitted to veterinary laboratories in the USA.

Jaclyn Dietrich,Tessa E LeCuyer,G Kenitra Hendrix,Claire R Burbick,Megan E Jacob,Barbara A Byrne,Karen Olsen,Maria Mitchell,Olgica Ceric, Rachel Lin, Jessica Joneson, Megan Lintner, Alexandra Fox, Diamond McClendon,Trevor Alexander, Kayla Joyce, Melissa Byrd, Jason Clinton, Keith Snipes,Laura Peak, Stephen D Cole

Zoonoses and public health(2024)

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摘要
AIMS:To estimate the prevalence of carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales (CPE) carriage among pets using faecal specimens submitted to veterinary diagnostic laboratories throughout the US. A secondary aim was to employ whole-genome sequencing (WGS) to characterize isolates of CPE from companion animals and compare them to publicly available CPE genomes. METHODS AND RESULTS:To estimate the prevalence of CPE in companion animals in the USA, a multicenter surveillance study including 8 different veterinary diagnostic laboratories from across the USA was conducted. Briefly, remnant faecal specimens from dogs and cats were screened using two selective agar plates (CHROMID Carba and MacConkey with 1 mg/L cefotaxime and 0.125 mg/L meropenem) and presumptive CPE isolates screened by the modified carbapenemase inactivation method for carbapenemase production. A total of 2393 specimens were screened and yielded 196 isolates for carbapenemase screening. A total of 5 isolates from 4 dogs and 1 cat at 3 different veterinary diagnostic laboratories were confirmed to produce a carbapenemase (0.21%). Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) revealed two E. coli (ST167) isolates that both produced an NDM-5 carbapenemase, two Enterobacter hormaechei (ST171) isolates that produced an NDM-5 carbapenemase and a KPC-4 carbapenemase respectively and one Klebsiella oxytoca (ST199) that produced an Oxa-48-type carbapenemase. Both E. coli isolates were found to be within at least 22 SNPs of previously characterized canine and human CPE isolates. CONCLUSIONS:This study demonstrates that the prevalence of CPE among companion animals is relatively low (0.21%) but that given the genetic relatedness of animal isolates to human isolates, additional surveillance is needed.
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