2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.plasmid.2018.09.001
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Antimicrobial resistance plasmid reservoir in food and food-producing animals

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Cited by 74 publications
(69 citation statements)
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References 122 publications
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“…1,2,4 The absence of carbapenem use in the veterinarian setting has not prevented the appearance of CRE and CPE in animals. 3 Studies have reported CRE emergence, 5,11,[14][15][16] and underlined the risk of their transmission from animals to humans through foodproducing animals. 3,5,11 In Algeria, the large-scale spread of CPE in human, livestock, and food (fresh vegetables and foodproducing animals) suggests an endemic situation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…1,2,4 The absence of carbapenem use in the veterinarian setting has not prevented the appearance of CRE and CPE in animals. 3 Studies have reported CRE emergence, 5,11,[14][15][16] and underlined the risk of their transmission from animals to humans through foodproducing animals. 3,5,11 In Algeria, the large-scale spread of CPE in human, livestock, and food (fresh vegetables and foodproducing animals) suggests an endemic situation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Carbapenems are not approved for veterinary use, 2 however, resistance to these antimicrobial agents has emerged in animals in recent years because of successful transmission of Enterobacteriaceae clonal groups and frequent horizontal gene transfer of carbapenemase-expressing plasmids among Gram-negative bacilli. 3,5 Public health officials sounded the alarm when a carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (CPE) was isolated for the first time in German swine farms in 2012 6 and carbapenemase-producing Acinetobacter spp. isolates from livestock (dairy farm) in France in 2010.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The mcr gene has been detected in many plasmid types, including IncI2, IncHI2, IncP, IncX4, IncY, IncF, and ColE10-like ones (Madec and Haenni, 2018) from different origins (Sun et al, 2018). Nevertheless, Matamoros et al (2017) and García-Meniño et al (2019) found that the majority of the mcr-carrier plasmids belonged mainly to four plasmid incompatibility groups: IncX4, IncI2, IncHI2, and ColE10-like.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3GC-resistance is increasingly common in E. coli causing infections in humans (6) and is also found in farmed and domestic animals around the world (7). The production of CTX-M (an extended-spectrum β-lactamase) is the most common mechanism of 3GC-resistance in E. coli in humans in the UK; for example, in a recent study of urinary E. coli from humans in South West England, 82.2% of 3GC-resistant isolates carried bla CTX-M (8).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%