Poultry can act as a reservoir of Salmonella enterica serotype Infantis (S. Infantis) of clinical and epidemiological importance because it triggers foodborne disease outbreaks and presents antibiotic multiresistance. The present study aimed to determine antimicrobial resistance in S. Infantis isolates from poultry livers, litter and chicken carcasses from Lima, Peru, during 2022–2023. S. Infantis was isolated from 10.1 % (27/267), 4.7 % (4/86), and 8 % (2/25) of the bird, litter and carcass samples, respectively. All isolates showed resistance to nalidixic acid (NA). In addition, 94 %, 76 %, 70 %, 48 %, and 45 % of the isolates showed resistance to tetracycline (TET), amoxicillin (AMX), chloramphenicol (C), gentamicin (GEN) and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (TS), respectively. All isolates showed susceptibility to imipinem and amoxicillin/clavulanic acid. Of the isolates, 93.9 % displayed multidrug resistance. The most frequent resistance pattern was C-AMX-NA-GEN-TET (24.2 %, n=8), determined even from carcass isolates, followed by C-AMX-NA-TET (18.2 %, n=6), and C-AMX-NA-GEN-TS-TET (12.1 %, n=4). The presence of these multidrug-resistant S. Infantis isolates is a threat to food safety and public health.
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