# High Prevalence of Colistin-Resistant Encoding Genes Carriage among Patients and Healthy Residents in Vietnam

**Authors:** Viet Ha Le, Thi Diep Khong, Ngoc Quang Phan, Thi Hoa Tran, Hong Ngoc Vu, Dong Van Quyen, Van Thuan Hoang, Nam Thang Nguyen

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/medicina60071025 · Medicina · 2024-06-21

## TL;DR

The study found a high prevalence of colistin-resistant genes in both patients and healthy people in Vietnam, highlighting the need for better infection control.

## Contribution

The study reports novel prevalence data of specific colistin resistance genes in both clinical and healthy populations in Vietnam.

## Key findings

- 25.9% of patients and 24.0% of healthy residents carried at least one colistin-resistance gene.
- mcr-1 was the most common gene in patients, while mcr-10 was most common in healthy residents.
- Some individuals carried multiple colistin-resistance genes.

## Abstract

Background and Objectives: We aimed to investigate the carriage of colistin-resistant genes among both patients with a history of antibiotic exposure and apparently healthy adults with no recent healthcare contact. Materials and Methods: Stool swabs were collected from healthy people, and specimens were collected at the infection foci from the patients. Eleven primer/probe sets were used to perform the Multiplex Real-Time PCR assay with the QuantiNova Multiplex Probe PCR kit for screening the carriage of colistin-resistant genes (mcr-1 to mcr-10) and 16S rRNA gene as internal control. Results: In total, 86 patients and 96 healthy residents were included. Twenty two patients (25.9%) were positive with at least one colistin-resistance encoding gene. The mcr-1 gene was the most frequent (16.5%), followed by mcr-9, mcr-6, and mcr-4 genes, where the prevalence was 11.8%, 10.6%, and 9.4%, respectively. No patient was positive with mcr-3, mcr-7, and mcr-8 genes. Eight patients (9.4%) were positive with multiple colistin-encoding genes. Twenty-three healthy people (24.0%) were positive with at least one colistin-resistance encoding gene, and the mcr-10 gene was the most frequent (27.0%), followed by the mcr-1, mcr-8, and mcr-9 genes, where the prevalence was 24.3%, 21.6%, and 13.5%, respectively. No person was positive with the mcr-2 and mcr-5 genes. Conclusions: Our findings underscore the urgent need for enhanced surveillance, infection control measures, and stewardship interventions to mitigate the spread of colistin resistance in Vietnam.

## Linked entities

- **Genes:** MCR1 (cytochrome-b5 reductase) [NCBI Gene 853707], C8 (ncRNA) [NCBI Gene 14515877], mcr3 (ncRNA) [NCBI Gene 14515894], mcr7 (ncRNA) [NCBI Gene 14515865], mcr10 (ncRNA) [NCBI Gene 14515854], LOC106069365 (alpha-2-macroglobulin-like) [NCBI Gene 106069365]

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** infection (MESH:D007239)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

21 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11278595/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11278595