Carbapenem-resistant
Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) present an urgent threat to public health.
While carbapenem antimicrobials are restricted in food-producing
animals, other β-lactams, such as ceftiofur, are used in livestock. This
use may provide selection pressure favoring the amplification of
carbapenem resistance but this relationship has not been established.
Previously unreported from US livestock, plasmid-mediated CREs have been
reported from livestock in Europe and Asia.Environmental and fecal
samples were collected from a 1,500 sow, US farrow-to-finish operation
during 4 visits over a 5 month period, 2015. Samples were screened using
selective media for the presence of CRE, with resulting
carbapenemase-producing isolates further characterized.Of 30
environmental samples collected from a nursery room on our initial
visit, 2 (7%) samples yielded 3 isolates: 2 ST 218 Escherichia coli and 1
Proteus mirabilis, carrying the metallo-β-lactamase gene blaIMP-27
on IncQ1 plasmids. We recovered 15 IMP-27-bearing isolates of multiple
Enterobacteriaceae species from 11 of 24 (46%) environmental samples
from 2 farrowing rooms collected on our third visit. These isolates each
also carried blaIMP-27 on IncQ1 plasmids. No CRE isolates
were recovered from fecal swabs or samples in this study.As is common in
US swine production, piglets on this farm receive ceftiofur at birth,
with males receiving a second dose at castration (≈day 6). This
selection pressure may favor the dissemination of blaIMP-27-bearing
Enterobacteriaceae in this farrowing barn. The absence of this
selection pressure in the nursery and finisher barns likely resulted in
the loss of the ecological niche needed for maintenance of this
carbapenem resistance gene.
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