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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, August 2002, p. 3038-3040, Vol. 40, No. 8
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.8.3038-3040.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Presence of Integron-Associated Resistance in the Community Is Widespread and Contributes to Multidrug Resistance in the Hospital
M. A. Leverstein-van Hall,* A. Paauw, A. T. A. Box, H. E. M. Blok, J. Verhoef, and A. C. Fluit
Eijkman-Winkler Institute for Microbiology, Infectious Diseases & Inflammation, University Medical Center, Utrecht, The Netherlands
Received 11 March 2002/
Returned for modification 18 April 2002/
Accepted 12 May 2002

ABSTRACT
Integrons are strongly associated with the multidrug resistance
seen in gram-negative bacilli in the hospital environment. No
data, however, are available on their prevalence in the community.
This study is the first to show that integrons are widespread
in
Enterobacteriaceae in the community and that integron-associated
resistance genes in the community constitute a substantial reservoir
for multidrug resistance in the hospital.

TEXT
Multidrug resistance among
Enterobacteriaceae in the hospital
setting is an increasing problem. The development of control
strategies, therefore, is of major importance. The acquisition
of an array of resistance genes by horizontal transfer, mediated
by plasmids and transposons, is currently thought to play an
increasing role in the development of this multiresistance.
A substantial portion of the resistance genes present on plasmids
and transposons is integrated into DNA elements called class
1 integrons (
4,
9). These genetic elements comprise a site-specific
recombination system capable of integrating and expressing those
genes contained in cassette-like structures. The majority of
the cassettes identified to date encode resistance to antimicrobial
agents. In addition to these cassettes, integrons may contain
the
sulI gene, which confers resistance to sulfamethoxazole
(
8). Sulfamethoxazole resistance can also be encoded by the
sulII gene, which is predominantly found on plasmids (
3,
8).
Class 1 integrons are strongly associated with the multiresistance
seen in
Enterobacteriaceae in the hospital environment (
6).
No data are available, however, on the prevalence of class 1
integrons in the community.
To address the problem of increasing multidrug resistance, we wondered whether strict infection control measures for patients carrying integrons would prevent the dissemination of multiresistance among Enterobacteriaceae in the hospital. To consider such a strategy, it is necessary to determine the influx of integron-carrying strains from the community into the hospital through patients. The aims of this study were to determine the prevalence of integrons in the community, to characterize their contents, and to determine whether resistance to sulfamethoxazole can be used as a screening criterion for integron detection.
Rectal swabs were taken from patients on the day of their admission to the neurodivision of our hospital after written informed consent for study participation was obtained. To obtain strains representative for the community, patients who had been admitted to a hospital or long-term-care facility in the 3 months prior to admission were excluded. Swabs were cultured on MacConkey agar (McC) and on McC with sulfamethoxazole (512 mg/liter) (McCS). Identification and susceptibility testing were performed using the VITEK 1 System with AMS R09.1 software (Biomerieux, Marcy-L'Etoile, France). The VITEK 1 is an instrument that automatically performs rapid identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing on a manually prepared inoculum. The disk diffusion method was used to test for sulfamethoxazole susceptibility. Integrons were detected by PCR amplification of the class 1 integrase-specific Int1 gene (GenBank accession no. M73819). The primers were Int1-F (5'-TCTCGGGTAACATCAAGG-3') and Int1-R (5'-AGGAGATCCGAAGACCTC-3'). Integron contents were characterized by performing a conserved-segment PCR and subsequent sequencing of the amplicon, containing the inserted gene cassettes (5). PCR primers for sul gene amplification (GenBank accession no. sulI M73819, sulII M28829) were sulI-F (5'-GTGACGGTGTTCGGCATTCT-3'), sulI-R (5'-TTTACAGGAAGGCCAACGGT-3'), sulII-F (5'-GGCAGATGTGATCGACCTCG-3'), and sulII-R (5'-ATGCCGGGATCAAGGACAAG-3'). Eighty-four Enterobacteriaceae (72 Escherichia coli strains, 5 Klebsiella pneumoniae strains, 3 Klebsiella oxytoca strains, 3 Enterobacter cloacae strains, and 1 Citrobacter freundii strain) were cultured from 53 out of the 57 patients included. Twenty sulfamethoxazole-resistant strains, all recovered from McCS, were obtained from 18 patients. Eleven strains (9 E. coli strains, 1 K. pneumoniae strain, and 1 K. oxytoca strain), obtained from 11 patients were intI-PCR positive, indicating a 19% prevalence of integrons in the community (11 of 57 patients). For 5 of the 11 strains the conserved-segment PCR result was positive, and for 4 of these the amplicons were subsequently sequenced. AadA1a, which encodes resistance to streptomycin and spectinomycin, was found three times, and dfrA1/AadA1a, which encodes additional resistance to trimethoprim, was found once (Table 1). Both integrons have been detected previously in multiresistant strains isolated at the neurodivision of our hospital (7), in Canadian clinical isolates (5), and in food-producing animals worldwide (1, 2, 10). These findings show that integrons have a widespread presence in the community and suggest that their acquisition may occur via the food chain.
The presence of an integron was significantly associated with
multidrug resistance, i.e., resistance to more than two antimicrobial
agents (chi-square test;
P < 0.0001). In addition to sulfamethoxazole,
10 of the 11 isolates were resistant to ampicillin, 8 were resistant
to trimethoprim, 2 were resistant to amoxicillin-clavulanic
acid, 2 were resistant to cefuroxime, and 1 was resistant to
gentamicin (Table
1). No resistance was observed to third-generation
cephalosporins, amikacin, carbapenems, or quinolones. Linkage
between integrons and resistance to these last antimicrobials,
therefore, seem to occur predominantly within the hospital environment.
This may be the result of acquisition of additional resistance
determinants by persistent integron-carrying community strains
(a persistence facilitated by antimicrobial selective pressure
within the hospital environment) or due to the transfer of integron-carrying
genetic elements from community strains to already-resistant
nosocomial strains. These two possibilities are not mutually
exclusive.
In order to assess the relationship between sulfamethoxazole resistance and the sulI, sulII, and intI genes, the collection of strains was extended with 122 blood culture isolates collected in our hospital (1994 to 2000), 47 multiresistant clinical isolates collected in our hospital (1997 to 2000), and 143 clinical strains sent from various European hospitals. These 312 strains comprised 122 E. coli strains, 44 K. pneumoniae strains, 33 K. oxytoca strains, 29 E. cloacae strains, 22 C. freundii strains, 30 Proteus mirabilis strains, 24 Enterobacter aerogenes strains, and 8 Serratia marcescens strains. Of the complete test panel of 396 strains, 167 were sulfamethoxazole resistant, and for 119 strains, the intI-PCR result was positive. All 119 strains were sulfamethoxazole resistant, indicating a 100% correlation between sulfamethoxazole resistance and the intI gene (Table 2). Of these 119 strains, 108 (91%) contained the sulI gene, which was detected exclusively in intI-PCR-positive strains. These results comply with the findings of Radstrom et al., who performed colony hybridization assays on 156 sulfonamide-resistant Enterobacteriaceae from Stockholm, Sweden, Houston, Texas, and Lagos, Nigeria (8). The results of the sulII-PCR (performed only on community and blood culture isolates) showed that half of the integron-carrying strains harbored a sulII gene in addition to the sulI gene (Table 3). The intI-PCR-positive strains lacking sulI harbored the sulII gene. Therefore, resistance to sulfamethoxazole is a very sensitive screening criterion for the detection of integrons in Enterobacteriaceae. The finding that all integron-carrying isolates in this study were recovered from McC agar with sulfamethoxazole shows that this criterion may be employed successfully in the clinical laboratory.
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TABLE 3. The distribution of the sulI gene, the sulII gene, and the Int1 gene in sulfamethoxazole-resistant Enterobacteriaceaea
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In conclusion, integrons are widespread in
Enterobacteriaceae in the community, and integron-carrying elements are responsible
for a substantial portion of the resistance genes introduced
into the hospital. This high prevalence renders our initial
thought of instituting isolation precautions for all integron-carrying
patients unfeasible. Further studies are needed to determine
the extent and manner in which community-acquired integrons
contribute to multiresistance among clinical isolates.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank B. M. J. Vlaminckx and M. Eijkelenkamp for their participation
in this study.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Eijkman-Winkler Institute for Microbiology, Infectious Diseases & Inflammation, University Medical Center Utrecht, Room G04.614, P.O. Box 85000, 3508 GA Utrecht, The Netherlands. Phone: 31 (0)30 2507 625. Fax: 31 (0)30 2541 770. E-mail:
M.LeversteinvHall{at}lab.azu.nl.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, August 2002, p. 3038-3040, Vol. 40, No. 8
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.8.3038-3040.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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