Department of General Practice, Faculty of Medicine, University of Nantes, 1 rue Gaston Veil, 44000 Nantes, France.
CHU Nantes, DRCI, Plateforme de Méthodologie et Biostatistiques, 44000 Nantes, France.
J Antimicrob Chemother. 2021 Feb 11;76(3):789-795. doi: 10.1093/jac/dkaa514.
The prevalence of ESBL-producing Escherichia coli (ESBL-E. coli) in community-acquired urinary tract infections (UTI) has been increasing worldwide since 2000, but with large geographical variations. The aim of this study was to determine whether the ESBL-E. coli rate in urine samples from individuals with community-acquired UTI was associated with the local socio-economic, environmental, agricultural and healthcare characteristics.
This was a cross-sectional study in western France using data on antibiotic susceptibility of E. coli isolated from urine samples of individuals with community-acquired UTI analysed in non-hospital laboratories from 2015 to 2017. The ESBL-E. coli rate was calculated for each laboratory. Data on socio-economic characteristics, human antibiotic consumption, hospital bed density, animal farming density and percentage of agricultural land and surface water were retrieved at the municipality level and aggregated by study area. Their association with ESBL-E. coli prevalence was quantified using multivariate linear regression models with a backward selection.
From 358 291 E. coli isolates from urine samples tested in 92 laboratories, the mean ESBL-E. coli prevalence for the study period was 3.30%. In an adjusted model, the ESBL-E. coli rate was significantly (P < 0.05) and positively associated with the local percentage of people >65 years old, third-generation cephalosporin use (DDD/1000 inhabitants), number of hospital beds/km2, poultry density, pig density and percentage of agricultural land. Lower deprivation was associated with a higher ESBL-E. coli rate.
Several anthropogenic factors (primary care, hospitals and animal farming) are associated with the local ESBL-E. coli rate in community-acquired UTI. These results could contribute to improve risk management, including identification of at-risk patient groups.
自 2000 年以来,产超广谱β-内酰胺酶(ESBL)大肠埃希菌(ESBL-E. coli)在社区获得性尿路感染(UTI)中的流行率在全球范围内不断上升,但存在较大的地域差异。本研究旨在确定社区获得性 UTI 患者尿液样本中 ESBL-E. coli 的检出率是否与当地社会经济、环境、农业和医疗保健特征有关。
这是一项在法国西部进行的横断面研究,使用了 2015 年至 2017 年在非医院实验室分析的社区获得性 UTI 患者尿液样本中分离的大肠埃希菌的抗生素药敏数据。为每个实验室计算 ESBL-E. coli 的检出率。在市级层面获取社会经济特征、人类抗生素使用量、医院床位密度、动物养殖密度以及农业用地和地表水百分比的数据,并按研究区域进行汇总。使用多元线性回归模型结合向后选择法,定量评估这些因素与 ESBL-E. coli 检出率之间的关联。
在 92 个实验室对 358291 株来自尿液样本的大肠埃希菌进行检测,研究期间 ESBL-E. coli 的平均检出率为 3.30%。在调整后的模型中,ESBL-E. coli 的检出率与当地 65 岁以上人口比例、第三代头孢菌素使用量(每 1000 居民的 DDD)、每平方公里医院床位数、家禽密度、猪密度和农业用地比例呈显著正相关(P<0.05)。较低的贫困程度与较高的 ESBL-E. coli 检出率相关。
一些人为因素(初级保健、医院和动物养殖)与社区获得性 UTI 中当地 ESBL-E. coli 的检出率有关。这些结果有助于改善风险管理,包括识别高危患者群体。