Emerging Microbes and Infections (Dec 2024)

Limited transmission of carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae between animals and humans: a study in Qingdao

  • Rina Bai,
  • Xiao Wang,
  • Zhiyu Zou,
  • Wenjing Zhou,
  • Chang Tan,
  • Yue Cao,
  • Bo Fu,
  • Weishuai Zhai,
  • Fupin Hu,
  • Yang Wang,
  • Congming Wu,
  • Yuanqi Zhu,
  • Chengtao Sun

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/22221751.2024.2387446
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1

Abstract

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Despite no carbapenem use in food animals, carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CRKP) perseveres within food animals, rising significant concerns regarding public health risks originating from these non-clinical reservoirs. To investigate the potential link between CRKP in food animals and its infections in humans, we conducted a cross-sectional study encompassing human clinical, meat products, and farm animals, in Qingdao city, Shandong province, China. We observed a relatively higher presence of CRKP among hospital inpatients (7.3%) compared to that in the meat products (2.7%) and farm animals (pig, 4.6%; chicken, 0.63%). Multilocus sequence typing and core-genome phylogenetic analyses confirm there is no evidence of farm animals and meat products in the clinical acquisition of K. pneumoniae isolates and carbapenem-resistant genes. However, potential transmission of K. pneumoniae of ST659 and IncX3 plasmid harbouring blaNDM-5 gene from pigs to pork and farm workers was observed. Our findings suggest a limited role of farm animals and meat products in the human clinical acquisition of K. pneumoniae, and the transmission of K. pneumoniae is more common within settings, than between them.

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