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1.
Microorganisms ; 10(11)2022 Oct 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2090283

ABSTRACT

The gastrointestinal tract is an important reservoir of high-risk Enterobacteria clones and a driver of antimicrobial resistance in hospitals. In this study, patients from six hospitals in four major Bulgarian towns were included in this study. Overall, 205 cefotaxime-resistant isolates (35.3%) of Enterobacterales order were detected in fecal samples among 580 patients during the period of 2017-2019. ESBL/carbapenemase/plasmidic AmpC producer rates were 28.8%, 2.4%, and 1.2%, respectively. A wide variety of ESBLs: CTX-M-15 (41%), CTX-M-3 (24%), CTX-M-27 (11%), and CTX-M-14 (4%) was found. The carbapenemases identified in this study were New Delhi metalo-ß-lactamase (NDM)-1 (5.4%) and Klebsiella carbapenemase (KPC)-2 (1.5%). Most NDM-1 isolates also produced CTX-M-15/-3 and CMY-4 ß-lactamases. They belonged to ST11 Klebsiella pneumoniae clone. The epidemiology typing revealed three main high-risk K. pneumoniae clones (26%)-ST11, ST258, and ST15 and five main Escherichia coli clones-ST131 (41.7%), ST38, ST95, ST405, and ST69. Sixty-one percent of ST131 isolates were from the highly virulent epidemic clone O25b:H4-ST131. Phylotyping revealed that 69% of E. coli isolates belonged to the virulent B2 and D groups. Almost all (15/16) Enterobacter isolates were identified as E. hormaechei and the most common ST type was ST90. Among all of the isolates, a high ESBL/carbapenemases/plasmid AmpC (32.4%) prevalence was observed. A significant proportion of the isolates (37%) were members of high-risk clones including two pan-drug-resistant K. pneumoniae ST11 NDM-1 producing isolates. Due to extensive antibiotic usage during COVID-19, the situation may worsen, so routine screenings and strict infection control measures should be widely implemented.

2.
Vet Sci ; 9(6)2022 Jun 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1884450

ABSTRACT

SARS-CoV-2 emerged in 2019 and found diagnostic laboratories unprepared worldwide. To meet the need for timely and accurate virus detection, laboratories used rapid Ag tests and PCR kits based on costly multi-channel real-time techniques. This study aimed to develop a conventional nested PCR based on the SARS-CoV-2 N gene, validate it against some approved assays, and apply it to samples from six cats with respiratory symptoms obtained in early 2020 during the first COVID-19 wave in humans in Bulgaria. The nested PCR technique showed 100% sensitivity and specificity; it could detect extracted SARS-CoV-2 RNA at concentrations as low as 0.015 ng/µL. The results identified the six tested cat samples as positive. Sequence analysis performed in two of them confirmed this. The presented technique is reliable, easy to implement and inexpensive, and can be successful in strategies for the prevention and control of SARS-CoV-2 in humans, cats and other susceptible species.

3.
Antibiotics (Basel) ; 10(6)2021 Jun 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1295740

ABSTRACT

The gastrointestinal tract is an important reservoir of extended spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)/carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales isolates. This study included patients from two Bulgarian hospitals. Overall, 98 ESBL producers (including 68 Escherichia coli and 20 Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates) were detected among 99 hospitalized patients, 212 patients at admission, and 92 hospital staff in 42.4%, 24.5%, and 4%, respectively. We observed blaCTX-M-15 in 47% of isolates, blaCTX-M-3 in 39% and blaCTX-M-14 in 11%. Three blaCTX-M-15 positive isolates were also blaKPC-2 positive. High transferability was detected for blaCTX-M-3 carrying plasmids (55%) with L/M and I1 replicon plasmids, followed by CTX-M-14 (36.4%) and CTX-M-15 (27.9%) with IncF plasmids. BlaKPC-2 was carried by FIIAs plasmids. Epidemiology typing revealed 8 K. pneumoniae ST types-ST15(8/20), ST17(4/20), ST37(2/20) and 9 E. coli ST types-ST131 (30.9%, 21/68), ST38 (8/68), ST95(7/68) and ST316(7/68). All ST131 isolates but one was from the highly virulent epidemic clone O25bST131. This is the first report in Bulgaria about ESBL/carbapenemase faecal carriage. We observed high ESBL/carbapenemases prevalence. A predominant number of isolates were members of highly epidemic and virulent PanEuropean clones ST15 K. pneumoniae and O25bST131 E. coli. High antibiotics usage during the COVID pandemic will worsen the situation. Routine screenings and strict infection control measures should be widely implemented.

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