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Ming-Fang Cheng

Ming-Fang Cheng

Kaohsiung Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan.

Title: Shedding Duration of Household ESBL-Producing, and Sequence Type 131 Escherichia coli among Different Regions in Taiwan

Biography

Biography: Ming-Fang Cheng

Abstract

Background: Broad-spectrum drug-resistant (defined as resistant to 3rd generation of cephalosporines or new quinolones) Escherichia coli (E. coli), particularly clonal group sequence type 131 (ST131) that produce CTX-M types of extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)-producing E. coli have dramatically increased worldwide. In our prior studies, we found that the prevalence of community-onset ESBLproducing E. coli UTIs among infants was similar in urban and rural populations in southern Taiwan. We also found in that study that most infants with UTIs were previously healthy with no apparent risk factors. The increase of ESBL-producing E. coli infections may be related to the infection by asymptomatic carriers or environmental circulation of ESBL-containing microorganisms. However, the distributions of resistant E. coli in households in different geographic regions of Taiwan are still unknown. Additional prospective multicenter studies are required to investigate the prevalence of community-onset E. coli infections in different geographic regions. Methods: E. coli isolates from the stool of children with uropathogenic or fecal carriage of BDR E. coli and their families and from their household environments were prospectively identified in different regions of Taiwan. The E. coli isolates identified as BDR were tested for ESBL, and multilocus sequence typing (MLST) was used to detect ST131. Fecal shedding duration of different regions was compared. Purpose: This study investigated the prevalence of BDR E. coli, particularly for ST131 and ESBL-producing strains, in human carriage, the environment, and households and the duration of shedding of BDR E. coli in different geographical regions of Taiwan.