作者
Rana Elshimy,Hamdallah Zedan,Tarek H. Elmorsy,Rania Abdelmonem Khattab
摘要
The biological fitness cost of antibiotic resistance is a key parameter in determining the rate of appearance and spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in Egypt. Our study aimed to investigate the prevalence of antibiotic resistance among Escherichia coli clinical isolates from Greater Cairo area hospitals. A total of 537 clinical isolates were recovered from samples of urine, diarrheal specimen, pus, wound culture, gastric wound, blood, drain culture, sputum, high vaginal swab, abscess, amniotic fluid, ventilator, burn swab, splenic drain culture, and unknown site of infection during different seasons. All isolates were subjected to phenotypic and genotypic susceptibility testing for colistin, nitrofurantoin, fosfomycin, and trimethoprim, quinolones, and β-lactam resistance. Our results revealed that 42.7% of the isolates harbored at least one resistance encoding gene, 10% harboring 2, 0.6% harboring 3, and 0.85% harboring 4 resistance-encoding genes. PCR reported the prevalence of resistance genes as follows: bla-SHV 13.4%, mcr-1 0.6%, qnr-A 23.8%, fos-A 1.06%, nfs-A 3.6%, and dfr-A 25.5%. We reported that three isolates carried the mcr-1 gene encoding colistin resistance from three different hospitals. Upon performing sequencing and phylogenetic analysis on the three positive mcr-1 isolates (MT890587, MT890588, and MT890589), the three isolates showed 100% identity with themselves, with some strains from Egypt and Japan, and 99.9% identity with an isolate from China.