Antibiotics (Jan 2022)

Reservoir of Antibiotic Residues and Resistant Coagulase Negative Staphylococci in a Healthy Population in the Greater Accra Region, Ghana

  • Samuel Oppong Bekoe,
  • Sophie Hane-Weijman,
  • Sofie Louise Trads,
  • Emmanuel Orman,
  • Japheth Opintan,
  • Martin Hansen,
  • Niels Frimodt-Møller,
  • Bjarne Styrishave

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11010119
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. 119

Abstract

Read online

Antimicrobial resistance threatens infectious disease management outcomes, especially in developing countries. In this study, the occurrence of resistant coagulase-negative staphylococci (rCoNS) and antibiotic residues in urine samples of 401 healthy individuals from Korle-Gonno (KG) and Dodowa (DDW) in Ghana was investigated. MALDI-ToF/MS with gram-staining techniques detected and identified the CoNS. SPE-LC-MS/MS detected and quantified nine commonly used antibiotics in the samples. The results showed 63 CoNS isolates detected in 47 (12%) samples, with S. haemolyticus (78%) and S. epidermidis (8%) being predominant. Most of the isolates (95%) were resistant to at least one antibiotic, with the highest resistance observed against sulphamethoxazole (87%). Resistance profiles in samples from DDW and KG were largely comparable, but with some differences. For instance, DDW isolates were more resistant to gentamicin (p = 0.0244), trimethoprim (p = 0.0045), and cefoxitin (p = 0.0078), whereas KG isolates were more resistant to erythromycin (p = 0.0356). Although the volunteers had not knowingly consumed antibiotics two weeks before sampling, antibiotic residues, ranging between 1.44–17000 ng mL−1 were identified in 22% of urine samples. Samples with antibiotic residues were likely to also contain rCoNS (89%). The most frequent antibiotics detected were tetracycline (63%) and ciprofloxacin (54%). Healthy individuals could thus be reservoirs of antibiotic residues and rCoNS at the community level.

Keywords