Environmental Health, College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, Bedford Park 5042, South Australia, Australia.
Environmental Health, College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, Bedford Park 5042, South Australia, Australia.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Nov 1;949:175194. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.175194. Epub 2024 Jul 31.
Increasingly, hospital handwashing basins have been identified as a source of healthcare-associated infections. Biofilms formed on the faucet and drains of handbasins can potentially harbour pathogenic microbes and promote the dissemination of antimicrobial resistance. However, little is known about the diversity of these biofilm communities and the routes of contamination.
The aim of this paper was to use 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing to investigate the diversity of prokaryote communities present in faucet and drain biofilm samples taken from hospital and residential handbasins.
The biofilm prokaryotes communities were diverse, with high abundances of potentially corrosive, biofilm forming and pathogenic genera, including those that are not typically waterborne. The β-diversity showed statistically significant differences in the variation of bacterial communities on the basis on building type (hospital vs residential p = 0.0415). However, there was no statistically significant clustering based on sampling site (faucet vs drain p = 0.46). When examining the β-diversity between individual factors, there was a significant difference between drain biofilms of different buildings (hospital drain vs residential drain p = 0.0338).
This study demonstrated that biofilms from hospital and residential handbasins contain complex and diverse microbial communities that differ significantly by building type. It also showed biofilms formed on the faucet and drain of a hospital's handbasins were not significantly different. Future research is needed to understand the potential mechanisms of transfer between drains and faucets of hospital handbasins. This information will inform improved infection control guidelines to control this underrecognized source of infections.
越来越多的医院洗手盆被认为是医院获得性感染的来源。水龙头和洗手盆排水口上形成的生物膜可能藏匿有致病性微生物,并促进抗生素耐药性的传播。然而,对于这些生物膜群落的多样性和污染途径知之甚少。
本文旨在通过 16S rRNA 基因扩增子测序,研究从医院和住宅洗手盆中采集的水龙头和排水口生物膜样本中存在的原核生物群落的多样性。
生物膜原核生物群落多样,具有高丰度的潜在腐蚀性、生物膜形成和致病性属,包括那些通常不是水性的属。β多样性基于建筑物类型(医院与住宅,p=0.0415)显示出细菌群落变化的统计学显著差异。然而,基于采样点(水龙头与排水口,p=0.46)没有统计学上的聚类。当检查个体因素之间的β多样性时,不同建筑物的排水生物膜之间存在显著差异(医院排水与住宅排水,p=0.0338)。
本研究表明,来自医院和住宅洗手盆的生物膜含有复杂多样的微生物群落,这些群落因建筑物类型而有显著差异。它还表明,医院洗手盆的水龙头和排水口形成的生物膜没有显著差异。需要进一步研究以了解医院洗手盆排水口和水龙头之间转移的潜在机制。这些信息将为制定更好的感染控制指南提供依据,以控制这一未被充分认识的感染源。