Document details

Emergence and Spread of Cephalosporinases in Wildlife: A Review

Author(s): Palmeira, Josman D. ; V. Cunha, Mónica ; Carvalho, João ; Ferreira, Helena ; Fonseca, Carlos ; Torres, Rita T.

Date: 2021

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10451/49300

Origin: Repositório da Universidade de Lisboa

Subject(s): one health; wildlife; cephalosporinases; ESBL; AmpC; CTX-M


Description

In the last decade, detection of antibiotic resistant bacteria from wildlife has received increasing interest, due to the potential risk posed by those bacteria to wild animals, livestock or humans at the interface with wildlife, and due to the ensuing contamination of the environment. According toWorld Health Organization, cephalosporins are critically important antibiotics to human health. However, acquired resistance to -lactams is widely distributed and is mainly mediated by extended-spectrum beta-lactamase and AmpC beta-lactamases, such as cephalosporinases. This work thus aimed to compile and analyse the information available on the emergence and dissemination of cephalosporinases in wildlife worldwide. Results suggest a serious scenario, with reporting of cephalosporinases in 46 countries from all continents (52% in Europe), across 188 host species, mainly birds and mammals, especially gulls and ungulates. The most widely reported cephalosporinases, CTX-M-1, CTX-M-14, CTX-M-15 and CMY-2, were also the most common in wild animals, in agreement with their ubiquity in human settings, including their association to high-risk clones of Escherichia coli (E. coli), such as the worldwide distributed CTX-M-15/ST131 E. coli. Altogether, our findings show that anthropogenic activities affect the whole ecosystem and that public policies pro-moting animal and environmental surveillance, as well as mitigation measures to avoid antimicrobial misuse and AMR spread, are urgently needed to be out in practise.

Document Type Journal article
Language English
Contributor(s) Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto da ULisboa
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