detalle del documento
IDENTIFICACIÓN

doi:10.1186/s42523-022-00178-9...

Autor
Menard, Julie Goggs, Robert Mitchell, Patrick Yang, Yufan Robbins, Sarah Franklin-Guild, Rebecca J. Thachil, Anil J. Altier, Craig Anderson, Renee Putzel, Gregory G. McQueary, Holly Goodman, Laura B.
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Categoría

Life Sciences

Año

2022

fecha de cotización

8/6/2022

Palabras clave
antimicrobial resistance genes veterinary sepsis microbiota ... ... d7 d60 animals dogs d1 treatment 9% fecal = 0 antimicrobial resistance
Métrico

Resumen

Background Multidrug resistance in companion animals poses significant risks to animal and human health.

Prolonged antimicrobial drug (AMD) treatment in animals is a potential source of selection pressure for antimicrobial resistance (AMR) including in the gastrointestinal microbiota.

We performed a prospective study of dogs treated for septic peritonitis, pyometra, or bacterial pneumonia and collected repeated fecal samples over 60 days.

Bacterial cultures and direct molecular analyses of fecal samples were performed including targeted resistance gene profiling.

Results Resistant Escherichia coli increased after 1 week of treatment (D1:21.4% vs. D7:67.9% P  < 0.001) and returned to baseline proportions by D60 (D7:67.9% vs D60:42.9%, P  = 0.04).

Dogs with septic peritonitis were hospitalized significantly longer than those with pneumonia or pyometra.

Based on genetic analysis, Simpson’s diversity index significantly decreased after 1 week of treatment (D1 to D7, P  = 0.008), followed by a gradual increase to day 60 (D1 and D60, P  = 0.4).

Detection of CTX-M was associated with phenotypic resistance to third-generation cephalosporins in E. coli (OR 12.1, 3.3–68.0, P  < 0.001).

Lincosamide and macrolide-resistance genes were more frequently recovered on days 14 and 28 compared to day 1 ( P  = 0.002 and P  = 0.004 respectively).

Conclusion AMR was associated with prescribed drugs but also developed against AMDs not administered during the study.

Companion animals may be reservoirs of zoonotic multidrug resistant pathogens, suggesting that veterinary AMD stewardship and surveillance efforts should be prioritized.

Graphical abstract

Menard, Julie,Goggs, Robert,Mitchell, Patrick,Yang, Yufan,Robbins, Sarah,Franklin-Guild, Rebecca J.,Thachil, Anil J.,Altier, Craig,Anderson, Renee,Putzel, Gregory G.,McQueary, Holly,Goodman, Laura B., 2022, Effect of antimicrobial administration on fecal microbiota of critically ill dogs: dynamics of antimicrobial resistance over time, BioMed Central

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