Title: CTXM ESBLs: molecular epidemiology of the current UK problem
1CTX-M ESBLs molecular epidemiology of the
current UK problem
- Neil Woodford BSc PhD MRCPath
- Antibiotic Resistance Monitoring Reference
Laboratory, SRMD - Colindale
2CTX-M b-lactamases in the UK
- 2000 First producer (Alobwede JAC 2003, 51, 470)
- K. oxytoca, Leeds, CTX-M-09
- 2001-2 First hospital outbreak (Brenwald JAC
2003, 51, 195) - K. pneumoniae, Birmingham, CTX-M-25-like
- 2002 Surveillance isolates (Mushtaq JAC 2003,
52, 528-9) - 4 E. coli from 3 centres, CTX-M-15
3Phylogeny of CTX-M ESBLs
4ESBLs in UK E. coli 2003-4
- increasing reference requests for ESBL
confirmation in E.coli - most expressing phenotype consistent with CTX-M
enzymes - including isolates from community-acquired UTIs
- little recent hospital contact
517th July 2004 broadsheets discover CTX-M
6ESBLs in UK E. coli 2003-4
- aim of this study was characterisation of
- isolates by PFGE (n 291 for this analysis)
- blaCTX-M alleles by PCR / sequencing
7PFGE analysis of CTX-M-producing E. coli
- ?85 similarity to define strains
- 65 isolates belonged to 5 major strains
- representatives of all major strains serotype O25
- epidemic strain A
- 110 isolates, 6 centres
- specific molecular characteristics
- 4 other major strains
- other isolates
- many diverse strains
- some small (intra-hospital) clusters
8Local epidemiology varies between centres
9Characterisation of blaCTX-M alleles
- 291 isolates analysed
- 279 (96) contained alleles encoding group 1
enzymes - 12 contained alleles encoding group 9 enzymes
- 25 group 1 alleles sequenced
- 20 isolates from 17 centres blaCTX-M-15
ISEcp1-like element - 4 isolates from 3 centres blaCTX-M-15
ISEcp1-like IS26 elements - 1 isolate blaCTX-M-03 ISEcp1-like element
10Disrupted blaCTX-M-15 in UK epidemic strain A
IS26 between the bla gene and its usual promoter
- lower MICs of CTX and CTZ likely due to altered
expression - PCR detection of this insertion
- working marker for this strain in the reference
laboratory
11Rapid PCR screening for probable strain A isolates
- amplify a 400-bp fragment
- spans the IS26-blaCTX-M link
- PFGE essential to confirm strain A
- other products possible
- care when interpreting
- only the 400-bp band is consistent with strain A
- distinct IS26-blaCTX-M links
- IS26-IS26 false products
123D clustering of selected CTX-M-15-producing
strains
- strains A, B, and D form distinct clusters
- 2 other strains have IS26 linked to blaCTX-M-15
- unrelated to strain A (TN17, from Paris, a
minor UK strain) - an IS26-blaCTX-M link is not a general indicator
of strain relatedness
13Geometric mean MICs, mg/L UK CTX-M producers
Meropenem ertapenem also active
14Geometric mean MICs, mg/L UK CTX-M producers
15Community-acquired CTX-M-producing strains
- 24 isolates, mainly from urines, referred as
community-acquired or GP specimen - 12 referring centres
- PFGE
- diverse types, but including
- strain A and all major strains
- CTX-M enzymes
- 67 produced CTX-M-15 / other group 1
- 3 produced CTX-M-09-like
- As multi-resistant as full collection
16Producers of CTX-M-09-like enzymes
- 12 producers from 9 centres
- distinct strains, including
- 3 isolates from centre 4, 2 isolates from centre
43 - unlinked emergence or horizontal transfer events ?
17On-going work
- confirm whether UK blaCTX-M alleles are
plasmid-mediated - no transfer demonstrated to date (n 10
isolates) - evidence of horizontal transfer events ?
- further characterisation of strain A
- how does IS26 influence cephalosporin MICs ?
- does IS26 also affect gentamicin MIC, or is
sensitivity an independent characteristic ? - what factors contribute to the strains success ?
- how are O25 CTX-M-15-producing strains related ?
- investigate possible common ancestry
18Reading List
- The UK situation
- Munday et al. JAC 2004 (Sept. issue)
- Woodford et al. JAC 2004 (Oct. issue)
- Reviews
- Bonnet. AAC 2004481-14
- Walther-Rasmussen Hoiby. Can J Microbiol
200450137-165
19Summary
- CTX-M-producing E. coli
- a rapidly developing problem (01/09/04 518
producers from 77 labs) - many produce CTX-M-15
- also detected in Klebsiella, Enterobacter,
Citrobacter and Proteus (01/09/04 66 producers
from 23 labs) - complex epidemiology
- spread of major strains between centres
- local spread of major / minor strains
- multiple strains referred from some centres
- horizontal transfer of plasmids and / or
integrons ? - overspill into the community
- multi-resistance
- implications for treatment of community-acquired
UTIs
20Acknowledgements
- UK microbiologists
- vigilence
- referring isolates to ARMRL
- Control strains PCR conditions
- Guillaume Arlet
- Laurent Poirel
- Funding
- Health Protection Agency
- EU / FP6-funded COBRA project
- SRMD
- Elaina Ward, ARMRL
- Liz Fagan, ARMRL
- Edi Karisik, ARMRL
- Polly Kaufmann, LHCAI
- Jane Turton, LHCAI
- Tom Cheasty, LEP
- Marina Warner, ARMRL
- Rachel Pike, ARMRL
- Dot James, ARMRL