Son Derece Bulaşıcı İshal Hastalığına Neden Olur – Fransa’da Antibiyotiğe Dirençli Shigella sonnei Türü Tespit Edildi – apk haber

XDR Antibiyogramı (Yoğun İlaca Dirençli) Shigella sonnei

XDR antibiyogramı (geniş ölçüde ilaca dirençli) Shigella sonnei. Kredi: Ulusal Referans Merkezi E. coli, şigella Ve SalmonellaPapaz Enstitüsü

Yaygın ilaca dirençli (XDR) suşlarının ortaya çıkışı Shigella sonnei Institut Pasteur’ün Fransız Ulusal Referans Merkezi’ndeki bilim adamları tarafından tespit edildi. Escherichia coli, şigella, Ve Salmonella. Şigelloz, neden olduğu oldukça bulaşıcı bir ishal hastalığıdır. şigella bakteri, yalnızca sanayileşmekte olan ülkelerde değil, aynı zamanda araştırmacıların birkaç yıldır yayılımını izlediği Fransa gibi sanayileşmiş ülkelerde de yaygındır.

Bakteriyel genom dizilimi ve vaka özelliklerinin analizi (çoğu vakanın erkek yetişkinlerde bildirildiği), aslen Güney Asya’dan gelen bu suşların ağırlıklı olarak erkeklerle seks yapan erkekler (MSM) arasında bulaştığını göstermektedir.

Bu gözlem, ECE’de cinsel yolla bulaşan enfeksiyonlar (STI’ler) için test yapılırken klinisyenler ve laboratuvarlar tarafından dikkate alınmalı ve eğer bir hastalık varsa sistematik antibiyogramlar yapılmalıdır. şigella XDR suşları ile enfekte hastaların tedavisini iyileştirmek için suş izole edilir. Sonuçlar dergide yayınlandı species that mainly circulates in industrialized countries. Shigella sonnei infections can cause short-term diarrhea (3-4 days) that resolves on its own. Antibiotic treatment is, however, necessary for moderate to severe cases (bloody diarrhea, risk of complications) or to prevent person-to-person transmission in epidemic situations. The acquisition of antibiotic resistance mechanisms by Shigella bacteria, therefore, restricts therapeutic options.

In this study, scientists from the National Reference Center for Escherichia coliShigella, and Salmonella (CNR-ESS) at the Institut Pasteur demonstrate an increase in antibiotic resistance in S. sonnei isolates collected in France over the past 17 years. The study is based on an analysis of more than 7,000 S. sonnei isolates and epidemiological information gathered in connection with national shigellosis surveillance conducted by the CNR-ESS between 2005 and 2021.

The CNR-ESS analyzes all the bacterial isolates sent by its network of private and public partner laboratories throughout France. Over this period, isolates described as “extensively drug-resistant” (XDR) were identified for the first time in 2015. The scientists then observed that the proportion of XDR isolates, which are resistant to virtually all the antibiotics recommended for treating shigellosis, increased significantly and reached a peak in 2021 when 22.3% of all S. sonnei isolates (99 cases) were XDR.

Genome sequencing revealed that all these French XDR strains belonged to the same evolutionary lineage, which became resistant to a key antibiotic (ciprofloxacin) in around 2007 in South Asia. In several geographical regions of the world, including France, the strains then acquired different plasmids coding for resistance to other first-line antibiotics (especially third-generation cephalosporins and azithromycin).

For severe cases, the only antibiotics that are still effective are carbapenems or colistin, which must be administered intravenously, resulting in more aggressive treatment that requires more complex monitoring in a hospital environment.

XDR isolates were observed in France in various contexts: in travelers returning from South Asia or South-East Asia, during an outbreak at a school in 2017 (more than 90 cases, leading to school closure; the index case had returned from South-East Asia) and in men who have sex with men (MSM). The latter were infected by an epidemic clone that has been spreading throughout Europe since 2020 but has also been found in North America and Australia. This subgroup of XDR strains circulating in MSM was the most widespread, accounting for 97% of XDR strains in France in 2021.

Frequent use of antibiotics in South and South-East Asia, together with repeat treatment for STIs in some people potentially exposed to this risk, increase the likelihood of selection of XDR Shigella strains. Further research is needed to understand the different clinical forms of infection, and especially whether there are asymptomatic forms that might cause the bacteria to spread more widely. Therapeutic trials are also crucial to identify effective oral antibiotics for treating these XDR Shigella strains.

Reference: “Rapid emergence of extensively drug-resistant Shigella sonnei in France” by Sophie Lefèvre, Elisabeth Njamkepo, Sarah Feldman, Corinne Ruckly, Isabelle Carle, Monique Lejay-Collin, Laëtitia Fabre, Iman Yassine, Lise Frézal, Maria Pardos de la Gandara, Arnaud Fontanet and François-Xavier Weill, 28 January 2023, Nature Communications.
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-36222-8

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