Prevalence and risk factors for carriage of ESBL-producing Enterobacteriaceae in a population of Dutch travellers:A cross-sectional study

BACKGROUND: We investigated prevalence and predictive factors for ESBL-E carriage in a population of mostly travellers prior to their travel (n = 2216). In addition, we examined ESBL genotype before travel and compared these to returning travellers. METHOD: A questionnaire and faecal sample were collected before travel, and a second faecal sample was collected immediately after travel. Faecal samples were analysed for ESBL-E, with genotypic characterization by PCR and sequencing. Risk factors for ESBL-E carriage prior to travel were identified by logistic regression analyses. RESULTS: Before t... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Arcilla, Maris S
Van Hattem, Jarne M
Bootsma, Martin C J
van Genderen, Perry J J
Goorhuis, Abraham
Grobusch, Martin P
Klaassen, Corné H W
Oude Lashof, Astrid M
Schultsz, Constance
Stobberingh, Ellen E
de Jong, Menno D
Penders, John
Verbrugh, Henri A
Melles, Damian C
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2020
Reihe/Periodikum: Arcilla , M S , Van Hattem , J M , Bootsma , M C J , van Genderen , P J J , Goorhuis , A , Grobusch , M P , Klaassen , C H W , Oude Lashof , A M , Schultsz , C , Stobberingh , E E , de Jong , M D , Penders , J , Verbrugh , H A & Melles , D C 2020 , ' Prevalence and risk factors for carriage of ESBL-producing Enterobacteriaceae in a population of Dutch travellers : A cross-sectional study ' , Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease , vol. 33 , 101547 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tmaid.2019.101547
Schlagwörter: ESBL / Carriage / Community / Travel / LACTAMASE-PRODUCING ENTEROBACTERIACEAE / ESCHERICHIA-COLI / FECAL CARRIAGE / COLONIZATION / ANIMALS
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26664402
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://cris.maastrichtuniversity.nl/en/publications/8d1b4177-1034-4add-a0b8-eb3a16f74371

BACKGROUND: We investigated prevalence and predictive factors for ESBL-E carriage in a population of mostly travellers prior to their travel (n = 2216). In addition, we examined ESBL genotype before travel and compared these to returning travellers. METHOD: A questionnaire and faecal sample were collected before travel, and a second faecal sample was collected immediately after travel. Faecal samples were analysed for ESBL-E, with genotypic characterization by PCR and sequencing. Risk factors for ESBL-E carriage prior to travel were identified by logistic regression analyses. RESULTS: Before travel, 136 participants (6.1%) were colonized with ESBL-E. Antibiotic use in the past three months (ORadjusted 2.57; 95% CI 1.59-4.16) and travel outside of Europe in the past year (1.92, 1.28-2.87) were risk factors for ESBL-E colonisation prior to travel. Travel outside of Europe carried the largest attributable risk (39.8%). Prior to travel 31.3% (40/128) of participants carried blaCTX-M 15 and 21.9% (28/128) blaCTX-M 14/18. In returning travellers 633 acquired ESBL-E of who 53.4% (338/633) acquired blaCTX-M 15 and 17.7% (112/633) blaCTX-M 14/18. CONCLUSION: In our population of Dutch travellers we found a pre-travel ESBL-E prevalence of 6.1%. Prior to travel, previous antibiotic use and travel outside of Europe were the strongest independent predictors for ESBL-E carriage, with travel outside of Europe carrying the largest attributable risk. Our molecular results suggest ESBL genes found in our study population prior to travel were in large part travel related.