ESBL carriage in pig slaughterhouse workers is associated with occupational exposure

Publication date

2017

Authors

Dohmen, WietskeISNI 0000000393872379
Van Gompel, LieseISNI 0000000492959584
Schmitt, HeikeISNI 000000039053231X
Liakopoulos, ApostolosORCID 0000-0002-3240-8444ISNI 0000000503728678
Heres, L.
Urlings, Bert A P
Mevius, DikISNI 0000000394318601
Bonten, Marc J M
Heederik, DickISNI 0000000388327640

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

We investigated the prevalence of extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL) carriage in slaughterhouse workers and the association with occupational exposure to slaughter animals and products. Stool samples from 334 employees in a Dutch pig slaughterhouse were obtained. Presence of ESBL was determined by selective plating, microarray analysis, and gene sequencing. Questionnaires were used to collect personal and occupational information. The overall prevalence of ESBL carriage was 4·8% (16/334). All ESBL-producing isolates were Escherichia coli. The ESBL genes detected were bla CTX-M-1 (n = 8), bla CTX-M-15 (n = 3), bla CTX-M-27 (n = 2), bla CTX-M-24 (n = 1), bla CTX-M-55 (n = 1), and bla SHV-12 (n = 1). A higher prevalence of ESBL was seen in workers in jobs with as tasks 'removal of lungs, heart, liver, tongue' (33%), and 'removal of head and spinal cord' (25%). For further analysis, participants were divided in two groups based on potential exposure to ESBL as related to their job title. One group with an assumed higher exposure to ESBL (e.g. stable work, stabbing, dehairing, removal of organs) and another group with an assumed lower exposure to ESBL (e.g. refrigeration, packaging and expedition). In the 'higher exposure' group, ten out of 95 (10·5%) were carrying ESBL vs. six out of 233 (2·6%) in the 'lower exposure' group. Human ESBL carriage was significantly associated with job exposure in the slaughterhouse (OR 4·5, CI 1·6-12·6). Results suggest that ESBL carriage in slaughterhouse workers overall is comparable with the Dutch population. Within the slaughterhouse population a difference in carriage exists depending on their position along the slaughter line and tasks involved.

Keywords

Antimicrobial resistance, blaCTX-M-1, occupational epidemiology, pig abattoir workers, zoonosis., Coronacrisis-Taverne

Citation

Dohmen, W, Van Gompel, L, Schmitt, H, Liakopoulos, A, Heres, L, Urlings, B A P, Mevius, D, Bonten, M J M & Heederik, D 2017, 'ESBL carriage in pig slaughterhouse workers is associated with occupational exposure', Epidemiology and Infection, vol. 145, no. 10, pp. 2003-2010. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0950268817000784