Abstract

The evolution of multidrug antibiotic resistance in commensal bacteria is an important public health concern. Commensal bacteria such as Escherichia coli, Streptococcus pneumoniae or Staphylococcus aureus, are also opportunistic pathogens causing a large fraction of the community-acquired and hospital-acquired bacterial infections. Multidrug resistance (MDR) makes these infections harder to treat with antibiotics and may thus cause substantial additional morbidity and mortality. Here, we develop an evolutionary epidemiology model to identify the factors favouring the evolution of MDR in commensal bacteria. The model describes the evolution of antibiotic resistance in a commensal bacterial species evolving in a host population subjected to multiple antibiotic treatments. We combine statistical analysis of a large number of simulations and mathematical analysis to understand the model behaviour. We find that MDR evolves more readily when it is less costly than expected from the combinations of single resistances (positive epistasis). MDR frequently evolves when bacteria are in contact with multiple drugs prescribed in the host population, even if individual hosts are only treated with a single drug at a time. MDR is favoured when the host population is structured in different classes that vary in their rates of antibiotic treatment. However, under most circumstances, recombination between loci involved in resistance does not meaningfully affect the equilibrium frequency of MDR. Together, these results suggest that MDR is a frequent evolutionary outcome in commensal bacteria that encounter the variety of antibiotics prescribed in the host population. A better characterization of the variability in antibiotic use across the host population (e.g. across age classes or geographical location) would help predict which MDR genotypes will most readily evolve.

Highlights

  • The emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains is a public health problem

  • Three antibiotic treatments are applied to the host population: a treatment by antibiotic 1 denoted by T1, a treatment by a distinct antibiotic 2 denoted by T2 and combination therapy

  • The epidemiology and evolution of resistance to antibiotics depends on the complex ecology of bacteria [18,26,38,47]

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Summary

Introduction

The emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains is a public health problem. MDR strains can originate because a single biological mechanism confers resistance to multiple drugs, because several genes conferring resistances to several antibiotics are genetically linked together on the chromosome or a plasmid, or because multiple mutations conferring resistance to multiple antibiotics have evolved over the course of treatment in a host. This latter explanation may explain MDR in bacterial species causing chronic infections such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis [15]. Three hypotheses have been proposed for MDR strain proliferation [14]:

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