Abstract

The aim of the present meta-analysis is to estimate the prevalence of colistin resistance among the Enterobacteriaceae family. Articles from various databases (Medline, Scopus, Web of Science, and Embase) examining colistin resistance among Enterobacteriaceae in human, animal, and environmental specimens were searched from 2016 to 2021 using related keywords. The Cochran's Q-test and I2 were applied to evaluate heterogeneity and a random-effects model was used to assess the pooled prevalence. The meta-regression method was applied to determine heterogeneity among the studies. Of 5,145 articles, 60 articles with a sample size of 404,856 was included. The pooled estimate for prevalence of bacterial resistance were 9.13% (95% CI: 6.96 to 11.56; I-squared = 99.4%) in total, 8.34% (95% CI: 5.87 to 11.16; I-squared = 99.3%) for Klebsiella spp. subgroup and 3.44% (95% CI: 2.46 to 4.57; I-squared = 98.4%) for E. coli subgroup. The pooled prevalence for human and animal settings were 9.07% (95% CI: 6.77 to 11.67; I-squared = 99.3%) and 9.73% (95% CI: 484 to 16.02; I-squared = 99.4%), respectively. The continent (coefficient: 3.51; 95% CI: 0.08 to 6.94, p: 0.045) and bacterial type (coefficient: 0.03; 95% CI: 0.01 to 0.05 p: 0.042) had significant effects on heterogeneity among studies. The results of this study showed that the prevalence of colistin resistance in Enterobacteriaceae was similar between animals and humans, with the highest colistin resistance found in Klebsiella strains.

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