Abstract

A 21-year-old previously healthy Japanese woman visited an outpatient clinic because of abdominal pain, watery diarrhea, vomiting, and mild fever that had started on the previous day. She traveled to rural and urban areas of Rwanda and returned to Japan 3 days before. Stool culture yielded the Plesiomonas shigelloides strain TMCH301018, against which minimum inhibitory concentrations of cefotaxime and cefotaxime-clavulanate were 128 and ≤0.12/4 μg/mL, respectively. The strain had the blaCTX-M-27 gene and an IncA/C replicon-type plasmid. Moreover, a transformant produced by introduction of an IncA/C plasmid extracted from TMCH301018 into Escherichia coli DH5α was positive for the blaCTX-M-27 gene and fulfilled the criteria of extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL) production described by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute, indicating that TMCH301018 produced ESBL of CTX-M-27 and the ESBL-encoding gene was located on an IncA/C plasmid. Pathogenicity of TMCH301018 for the patient's complaints was uncertain because a molecular assay detected other enteropathogens in the stool specimen and the symptoms improved within 2 days with administration of oral ciprofloxacin, to which TMCH301018 was not susceptible. To our knowledge, this is the first report describing the isolation of ESBL-producing P. shigelloides.

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