Publication | Open Access
Occurrence of Antibiotic-Resistant Uropathogenic <i>Escherichia coli</i> Clonal Group A in Wastewater Effluents
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Citations
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References
2007
Year
EngineeringWastewater EffluentsPathologyEscherichia ColiMunicipal WastewaterAntibiotic ResistanceDrug ResistanceEnvironmental MicrobiologyInfection ControlAntimicrobial ResistancePathogen CharacterizationBacterial ResistanceClinical MicrobiologyAntimicrobial Resistance GeneAntimicrobial SusceptibilityAntibioticsEffluent DisposalEnvironmental EngineeringCga IsolatesMicrobiologyMedicineE. Coli Cga
Isolates of Escherichia coli belonging to clonal group A (CGA), a recently described disseminated cause of drug-resistant urinary tract infections in humans, were present in four of seven sewage effluents collected from geographically dispersed areas of the United States. All 15 CGA isolates (1% of the 1,484 isolates analyzed) exhibited resistance to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMZ), accounting for 19.5% of the 77 TMP-SMZ-resistant isolates. Antimicrobial resistance patterns, virulence traits, O:H serotypes, and phylogenetic groupings were compared for CGA and selected non-CGA isolates. The CGA isolates exhibited a wider diversity of resistance profiles and somatic antigens than that found in most previous characterizations of this clonal group. This is the first report of recovery from outside a human host of E. coli CGA isolates with virulence factor and antibiotic resistance profiles typical of CGA isolates from a human source. The occurrence of "human-type" CGA in wastewater effluents demonstrates a potential mode for the dissemination of this clonal group in the environment, with possible secondary transmission to new human or animal hosts.
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