A microbiological and genomic perspective of globally collected Escherichia coli from adults hospitalized with invasive E. coli disease

Publication date

2024-09

Authors

Arconada Nuin, Enya
Vilken, Tuba
Xavier, Basil Britto
Doua, Joachim
Morrow, Brian
Geurtsen, Jeroen
Go, Oscar
Spiessens, Bart
Sarnecki, Michal
Poolman, Jan

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

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License

cc_by

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Escherichia coli can cause infections in the urinary tract and in normally sterile body sites leading to invasive E. coli disease (IED), including bacteraemia and sepsis, with older populations at increased risk. We aimed to estimate the theoretical coverage rate by the ExPEC4V and 9V vaccine candidates. In addition, we aimed at better understanding the diversity of E. coli isolates, including their genetic and phenotypic antimicrobial resistance (AMR), sequence types (STs), O-serotypes and the bacterial population structure. METHODS: Blood and urine culture E. coli isolates (n = 304) were collected from hospitalized patients ≥60 years (n = 238) with IED during a multicentric, observational study across three continents. All isolates were tested for antimicrobial susceptibility, O-serotyped, whole-genome sequenced and bioinformatically analysed. RESULTS: A large diversity of STs and of O-serotypes were identified across all centres, with O25b-ST131, O6-ST73 and O1-ST95 being the most prevalent types. A total of 45.4% and 64.7% of all isolates were found to have an O-serotype covered by the ExPEC4V and ExPEC9V vaccine candidates, respectively. The overall frequency of MDR was 37.4% and ST131 was predominant among MDR isolates. Low in-patient genetic variability was observed in cases where multiple isolates were collected from the same patient. CONCLUSIONS: Our results highlight the predominance of MDR O25b-ST131 E. coli isolates across diverse geographic areas. These findings provide further baseline data on the theoretical coverage of novel vaccines targeting E. coli associated with IED in older adults and their associated AMR levels.

Keywords

Microbiology (medical), Pharmacology (medical), Infectious Diseases, Pharmacology, Journal Article

Citation

Arconada Nuin, E, Vilken, T, Xavier, B B, Doua, J, Morrow, B, Geurtsen, J, Go, O, Spiessens, B, Sarnecki, M, Poolman, J, Bonten, M, Ekkelenkamp, M, Lammens, C, Goossens, H, Glupczynski, Y, Van Puyvelde, S & COMBACTE-NET Consortium/EXPECT Study Group 2024, 'A microbiological and genomic perspective of globally collected Escherichia coli from adults hospitalized with invasive E. coli disease', The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy, vol. 79, no. 9, e182, pp. 2142-2151. https://doi.org/10.1093/jac/dkae182