Companion Animals—An Overlooked and Misdiagnosed Reservoir of Carbapenem Resistance
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Carbapenemase-Producing Bacteria in Companion Animals
Enzyme | Year | Country | Host | Source | Bacterial Species | Detection Methods | Refs. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
IMP-4 | 2016 | Australia | Cats | Commensal | Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium | AST | [12] |
KPC-2 | 2018 | Brazil | Dog | Infection (UTI) | Escherichia coli | Imipenem synergy test, modified Hodge testing, PCR | [9] |
KPC-2 | 2021 | Brazil | Dog | Infection (UTI) | Klebsiella pneumoniae | Imipenem synergy test, AST | [10] |
KPC-4 | 2018 | USA | Dog | Infection (UTI, SSTI) | Enterobacter xiangfangensis | Biochemical Tests | [11] |
NDM-1 | 2013 | United States | Dogs, Cats | Infection (SSTI, UTI) | Escherichia coli | AST | [24] |
NDM-1 | 2017 | China | Dogs | Commensal | Escherichia coli | Selective culture media | [16,25] |
NDM−1 | 2018 | Italy | Dog | Commensal | Acinetobacter radioresistens | Selective culture media | [23] |
NDM-5 | 2016 | Algeria | Dogs | Commensal | Escherichia coli | PCR | [17] |
NDM-5 | 2017 | China | Dogs | Commensal | Escherichia coli | Selective culture media | [16] |
NDM-5 | 2019 | United Kingdom | Dog | Infection (SSTI) | Escherichia coli | AST | [19] |
NDM-5 | 2018 | Finland | Dogs | Infection (Otitis externa) | Escherichia coli | AST followed by modified Hodge testing, UV spectrometric detection of imipenem hydrolysis | [18] |
NDM-5 | 2021 | Italy | Dog | Infection (UTI) | Escherichia coli | Meropenem synergy test | [15] |
NDM-5 | 2018 | United States | Dog | Infection (URTI) | Escherichia coli | AST | [20] |
NDM-5 | 2018 | United States | Dogs, Cats | Infection (UTI, URTI) | Escherichia coli | AST | [22] |
NDM-5 | 2018 | South Korea | Dog, Cat | Commensal | Escherichia coli | AST, PCR | [21] |
NDM-9 | 2017 | China | Dog | Commensal | Escherichia coli | Selective culture media | [16] |
OXA-48 | 2009–2010 | Germany | Dogs, Cats, Horses | Infection | Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter cloacae | Selective culture media for cephalosporin resistance, PCR | [36] |
OXA-48 | 2013 | Germany | Dog | Commensal, Infection (UTI, SSTI, URTI, CRBSI) | Klebsiella pneumoniae, Escherichia coli | AST | [29] |
OXA-48 | 2016 | United States | Dogs, Cats | Infection (UTI, SSTI, Genital tract) | Escherichia coli | AST | [31] |
OXA-48 | 2016 | Algeria | Dogs | Commensal | Escherichia coli | PCR | [17] |
OXA-48 | 2017 | Algeria | Dogs, Cat, Horses, Pet birds | Commensal | Enterobacter cloacae, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae | Selective culture media | [32] |
OXA-48 | 2017 | France | Dog | Commensal | Escherichia coli | Selective culture media | [30] |
OXA-48 | 2018 | Germany | Dogs, Cats, Horses | Infection (UTI, SSTI, genital tract, otitis, URTI) | Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter cloacae, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella oxytoca | Selective culture media | [28] |
OXA-181 | 2018 | Switzerland | Dogs, Cats | Commensal | Escherichia coli | Selective culture media | [26] |
OXA-181 | 2020 | Portugal | Dog | Commensal | Escherichia coli | Selective culture media and AST | [27] |
OXA-181 | 2021 | Portugal | Cat | Infection (SSTI) | Klebsiella pneumoniae | Selective culture media and AST | [37] |
OXA-23 | 2014 | Portugal | Cat | Infection (UTI) | Acinetobacter baumannii | AST | [33] |
OXA-23 | 2017 | Germany | Dogs, Cats | Infection (UTI, suppurate inflammation) | Acinetobacter baumannii | Selective culture media | [34] |
OXA−23 | 2018 | Italy | Dogs, Cats | Commensal | Acinetobacter baumanni | Selective culture media | [23] |
OXA-66 | 2017 | Germany | Dogs, Cats | Infection (UTI, SSTI, URTI, CRBSI, suppurate inflammation) | Acinetobacter baumannii | Selective culture media | [34] |
VIM-1 | 2016 | Spain | Dog | Commensal | Klebsiella pneumoniae | Selective culture media, Meropenem synergy test | [14] |
VIM-2 | 2018 | South Korea | Dog | Infection (SSTI) | Pseudomonas aeruginosa | AST | [13] |
3. Phenotypic Characteristics of Carbapenemases and Their Genetic Background in Isolates from Companion Animals
3.1. Serine Carbapenemases
3.2. Metallo-β-Lactamases
3.3. Oxacillinases
4. Methods for Detection and Identification of Carbapenemases
4.1. Selective Culture Media
4.2. Biochemical Tests
4.3. Disc Diffusion Methods
4.4. Lateral Flow Assays
4.5. Molecular Testing
4.6. Mass Spectrometry Analysis
5. Transmission Potential
- Achieving the principles of prudent use of antibiotics in veterinary practice to ensure that carbapenems are used only in the very few cases that lack other suitable alternatives based on culture and AST;
- Include the systematic screening for carbapenem resistance in veterinary microbiology laboratories;
- Surveillance and monitoring for the presence of genes encoding resistance to critically important antimicrobials, such as carbapenems;
- Appropriate hygiene practices after handling animals both in domestic and health care settings;
- Infection control measures when dealing with companion animals with infections caused by carbapenem-resistant strains that include isolation of infected animals.
6. Conclusions and Final Remarks for Veterinary Medicine
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Amber Class | Representative Carbapenemase Type | Hydrolysis Profile | Refs. | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Narrow Spectrum Cephalosporins | Extended Spectrum Cephalosporins | Imipenem * | Meropenem * | |||
Class A | KPC | + | + | + | + | [2,9] |
Class B | IMP, VIM, NDM, | + | + | + | + | [3] |
Class D | OXA-48-like | + | - | Variable 1 | - | [4,38,39] |
OXA-23-like | + | + | + | + | [4] |
Technique | Sensitivity (%) | Specificity (%) | Turnaround Time (h) | Advantages | Disadvantages |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Selective Culture Medium | |||||
SUPERCARBA | 95.6–96.5 | 60.7 | 18–24 | Colour identification of bacterial species | Extensive turnaround time; possible growth of non-carbapenemase producing bacteria; positive control needed. |
CRE Agar | 78 | 60–66 | |||
ChromID CARBA Smart | 91 | 76–89 | |||
CHROMagar™ KPC | 100 | NDA | Only detects KPC-producing bacteria | ||
CHROMagar™ OXA-48 | 75.8 | 99.3 | Only detects OXA-48-producing bacteria | ||
Biochemical Tests | |||||
Rapidec® CarbaNP | 100 | 100 | 2 | Rapid Detection of carbapenemase-producing bacteria | Non-specific detection; colour interpretation; expensive |
CIM | NDA | NDA | 8 | Affordable; no commercial kit necessary | Non-specific detection; negative control strain needed; non-standardized |
BlueCarba | 100 | 100 | 2 | Rapid Detection of carbapenemase-producing bacteria | Non-specific detection; positive control needed; expensive |
β CARBA Test™ | 84.9 | 95.6 | 0.5 | Rapid Detection of carbapenemase-producing bacteria | Non-specific detection; expensive |
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Silva, J.M.d.; Menezes, J.; Marques, C.; Pomba, C.F. Companion Animals—An Overlooked and Misdiagnosed Reservoir of Carbapenem Resistance. Antibiotics 2022, 11, 533. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11040533
Silva JMd, Menezes J, Marques C, Pomba CF. Companion Animals—An Overlooked and Misdiagnosed Reservoir of Carbapenem Resistance. Antibiotics. 2022; 11(4):533. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11040533
Chicago/Turabian StyleSilva, Joana Moreira da, Juliana Menezes, Cátia Marques, and Constança Ferreira Pomba. 2022. "Companion Animals—An Overlooked and Misdiagnosed Reservoir of Carbapenem Resistance" Antibiotics 11, no. 4: 533. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11040533