Co-carriage of diverse vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium ST80-lineages by 70% of patients in an Irish hospital

File Type:
PDFItem Type:
Journal ArticleDate:
2025Access:
openAccessCitation:
Kavanagh NL, Kinnevey PM, Brennan GI, O'Connell B, Goering RV, Coleman DC, Co-carriage of diverse vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium ST80-lineages by 70% of patients in an Irish hospital, JAC-Antimicrobial Resistance, 7, 3, 2025, dlaf065Abstract:
Background: Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VREfm) are significant nosocomial pathogens. Irish VREfm comprise diverse vanA-encoding ST80-complex type (CT) lineages. Recent studies indicate that within-patient VREfm diversity could confound surveillance. This study investigated the intra-host VREfm genetic diversity among colonized Irish hospital patients.
Methods: Rectal VREfm (n = 150) from 10 patients (15 isolates each) were investigated by WGS, core-genome MLST and split k-mer (SKA)-SNP analysis. Plasmids and vanA-transposons from 39 VREfm representative of CTs identified were resolved by hybrid assembly of short-read (Illumina) and long-read (Oxford Nanopore Technologies) sequences. Plasmid relatedness was assessed based on Mash distances. Thirty vancomycin-susceptible E. faecium (VSEfm) from four VREfm-positive patients were also investigated.
Results: All isolates were clade A1 and most were ST80 (VREfm, 147/150; VSEfm, 25/30). Seventy-percent of patients (7/10) harboured either two (n = 4), three (n = 2) or four (n = 1) VREfm CTs. Individual patient isolate pairs from different CTs differed significantly (median SKA-SNPs 2933), but differences were minimal between isolate pairs of the same CT (median SKA-SNPs 0). In total, 193 plasmids were identified in 39 VREfm investigated. Near-identical plasmids (≥99.5% average nucleotide identity) were identified in divergent CTs from multiple patients. Most VREfm (28/39, 72%) harboured vanA on closely related transferable, linear plasmids. Divergent CTs within individual patients harboured either indistinguishable vanA-transposons or vanA-transposons with distinct organizational iterations. Four VSEfm from different CTs investigated harboured similar plasmids to VREfm.
Conclusion: VREfm within-host diversity is highly prevalent in Irish hospital patients, which complicates surveillance. Linear plasmids play an important role in the emergence of Irish VREfm.
Sponsor
Grant Number
Health Research Board (HRB)
ILP-POR-2019-010
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/dcolemanhttp://people.tcd.ie/kinnevp
Author: Coleman, David; Kinnevey, Peter
Sponsor:
Health Research Board (HRB)Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
JAC-Antimicrobial Resistance;7;
3;
Availability:
Full text availableSubject (TCD):
Genes & Society , Immunology, Inflammation & Infection , Drug Resistance , Genetic/Molecular epidemiology , Genomes, Genomics , Infectious diseases , Molecular BiologyDOI:
https://doi.org/10.1093/jacamr/dlaf065Metadata
Show full item recordThe following license files are associated with this item: