Recovery Of Clinically Relevant Multidrug-Resistant Klebsiella Pneumoniae Lineages From Wastewater In Kumasi Metropolis, Ghana.
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Environmental Microbiology Reports
Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is under-monitored in Africa, with few
reports characterizing resistant bacteria from the environment. This study
examined physicochemical parameters, chemical contaminants and
antibiotic-resistant bacteria in waste stabilization pond effluents, hospital
wastewater and domestic wastewater from four sewerage sites in Kumasi.
The bacteria isolates were sequenced. Three sites exceeded national
guidelines for total suspended solids, biochemical oxygen demand, chemical oxygen demand and electrical conductivity. Although sulfamethoxazole
levels were low, the antibiotic was detected at all sites. Multi-drug-resistant
Klebsiella pneumoniae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa were isolated with
multi-locus sequence typing identifying K. pneumoniae strains as ST18 and
ST147, and P. aeruginosa as ST235, all of clinical relevance. A comparison
of ST147 genomes with isolates from human infections in Africa showed
remarkable similarity and shared AMR profiles. Thirteen of the twenty-one
plasmids from ST147 harbored at least one AMR gene, including blaCTX-M-15 linked to copper-resistance genes. Our study demonstrated high bacterial counts and organic matter in the analysed wastewater. The recovery
of clinically significant isolates with multiple antibiotic and heavy metal resis tance genes from the wastewater samples raises public health concerns.
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Research Article
Citation
Ekhosuehi, A., Ikhimiukor, O. O., Essandoh, H. M. K., Asiedu, N. Y., Aighewi, I. T., Sunmonu, G. T., ... & Okeke, I. N. (2024). Recovery of clinically relevant multidrug‐resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae lineages from wastewater in Kumasi Metropolis, Ghana. Environmental Microbiology Reports, 16(6), e70018.
