Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance has been recognized as an important emerging environmental pollutant. ‘Last-resort’ antibiotics including tigecycline, polymyxin E, daptomycin, vancomycin and linezolid are the ‘last line of defence’ for antibiotic resistant pathogen infections. Therefore, the presence of ‘last-resort’ antibiotic resistant pathogens in hospital environments and the nosocomial transmission of ‘last-resort’ antibiotic resistance poses a grave threat to the well-being of patients. In this work, the extent of resistance to ‘last-resort’ antibiotics in culturable pathogens in hospital wastewater was investigated. Resistance to ‘last-resort’ antibiotics were quantified for 1384 culturable Enterobacteriaceae, Enterococcus, Staphylococcus, and Pseudomonas strains. With these investigations, several significant findings were made: (1) a very high level of resistance to ‘last-resort’ antibiotics was found; (2) multiple resistance to antibiotics, including ‘last-resort’ antibiotics, was prevalent; (3) a high level of ‘last-resort’ antibiotic resistance phenotype-genotype inconsistency was found, suggesting knowledge gap for resistance mechanisms; 4) tet(X4)-containing tigecycline-resistant Gram-positive pathogens were found for the first time; 5) wastewater treatment processes are effective in preventing the release of ‘last-resort’ antibiotic resistant pathogens to the environment. This investigation reveals the severe situation on ‘last-resort’ resistance in the hospital environment, and implies high risk for nosocomial transmission of ‘last-resort’ antibiotic resistant pathogens.

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