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Long-term Carriage of Extended-Spectrum β-Lactamase-Producing Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae in the General Population in The Netherlands.

Background: This longitudinal study aimed to investigate (risk factors for) persistence of carriage and molecular characteristics of extended-spectrum and plasmid-encoded AmpC β-lactamase-producing (ESBL/pAmpC) Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae (ESBL-E/K) in adults in the Dutch community.

Methods: Following a cross-sectional study (ESBL-E/K prevalence, 4.5%), a subset of ESBL-E/K-positive (n = 76) and -negative (n = 249) individuals volunteered to provide 5 monthly fecal samples and questionnaires. ESBL-E/K was cultured using selective enrichment/culture, and multilocus sequence types (MLSTs) were determined. ESBL/pAmpC-genes were analyzed using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and sequencing. Plasmids were characterized and subtyped by plasmid MLST. Risk factors for persistent carriage were analyzed using logistic regression.

Results: Of the initially ESBL-E/K-positive participants, 25 of 76 (32.9%) remained positive in all subsequent samples; 51 of 76 persons (67.1%) tested ESBL-E/K negative at some time point during follow-up, of which 31 (40.8%) stayed negative throughout the longitudinal study. Carriers often carried the same ESBL gene and plasmid, but sometimes in different ESBL-E/K strains, indicative for horizontal transfer of plasmids. Of the 249 initially ESBL-E/K-negative participants, the majority (n = 218 [87.6%]) tested negative during 8 months of follow-up, whereas 31 of 249 (12.4%) participants acquired an ESBL-E/K. Escherichia coli phylogenetic group B2 and D and travel to ESBL high-prevalence countries were associated with prolonged carriage.

Conclusions: ESBL-E/K carriage persisted for >8 months in 32.9% of the initially ESBL-positive individuals, while 12.4% of initially negative individuals acquired ESBL-E/K during the study. A single positive test result provides no accurate prediction for prolonged carriage. Acquisition/loss of ESBL-E/K does not seem to be a random process, but differs between bacterial genotypes.

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