Litcius/Paper detail

Carriage Duration and Household Transmission of Enterobacterales Producing Extended-Spectrum Beta-Lactamase in the Community: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Weiping Ling, Anna Maria Peri, Luis Furuya‐Kanamori, Patrick N. A. Harris, David L. Paterson

2022Microbial Drug Resistance21 citationsDOI

Abstract

An attributing factor to Enterobacterales producing extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL-E) community spread is human-to-human transmission. This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to estimate the duration of ESBL-E carriage in the community and the rate of household transmission. Literature search was performed on PubMed, EMBASE, and Scopus. Dose-response meta-analysis was planned to model the proportion of ESBL-E carriers and household transmission over time. Twenty-six studies ( n = 2,505 participants) were included. The median carriage duration was 2 months. Approximately 22% (95% confidence interval: 16–28) had persistent carriage after 12 months. Travelers had significantly shorter carriage (median 1–2 months) than discharged hospital patients (median 6 months) at all measured time points. There were insufficient data to robustly meta-analyze household transmission. Nonetheless, five longitudinal studies reported 18.4% to 35.2% of contacts acquired ESBL-E within 4 to 36 months from hospital discharge of index case. Transmission events from travelers to their contacts appeared lower. Travelers with travel-acquired ESBL-E had significantly faster decolonization rate than discharged patients, suggesting that travel-associated import of multidrug-resistant pathogen may have limited contribution to community transmission of ESBL-E. The substantial prevalence of persistent carriers warrant consideration for additional measures to mitigate exposure risk of ESBL-E from discharged patients in the community and from readmitting patients in the hospital.

Topics & Concepts

CarriageTransmission (telecommunications)MedicineConfidence intervalMeta-analysisBeta-lactamaseInternal medicinePediatricsDemographyBiologyEscherichia coliPathologyEngineeringGeneBiochemistrySociologyElectrical engineeringAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaAntibiotic Use and ResistancePneumonia and Respiratory Infections