# Environmental Dissemination of Antimicrobial Resistance: A Resistome-Based Comparison of Hospital and Community Wastewater Sources

**Authors:** Taito Kitano, Nobuaki Matsunaga, Takayuki Akiyama, Takashi Azuma, Naoki Fujii, Ai Tsukada, Hiromi Hibino, Makoto Kuroda, Norio Ohmagari

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics15010099 · Antibiotics · 2026-01-19

## TL;DR

Hospital wastewater contains more diverse and abundant antibiotic resistance genes than community wastewater, emphasizing the need for monitoring to combat antimicrobial resistance.

## Contribution

The study provides a longitudinal resistome comparison between hospital and community wastewater using metagenomic analysis.

## Key findings

- Hospital wastewater had 825 unique ARGs compared to 333 in community wastewater.
- Hospital samples showed significantly enriched ARGs for aminoglycosides and β-lactam antibiotics.
- No ARGs were significantly enriched in community wastewater samples.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Comparative analysis of antimicrobial resistomes in hospital and community wastewater can provide valuable insights into the diversity and distribution of antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs), contributing to the advancement of the One Health approach. This study aimed to characterize and compare the resistome profiles of wastewater sources from a hospital and community. Methods: Longitudinal metagenomic analysis was conducted on wastewater samples collected from the National Center for Global Health and Medicine (hospital) and a shopping mall (community) in Tokyo, Japan, between December 2019 and September 2023. ARG abundance was quantified using reads per kilobase per million mapped reads (RPKM) values, and comparative analyses were performed to identify the significantly enriched ARGs in the two sources. Results: A total of 46 monthly wastewater samples from the hospital yielded 825 unique ARGs, with a mean RPKM of 2.5 across all detected genes. In contrast, 333 ARGs were identified in the three shopping mall wastewater samples, with a mean RPKM of 2.1. Among the ARGs significantly enriched in the hospital samples, 23, including genes conferring resistance to aminoglycosides (nine groups) and β-lactam antibiotics (eight groups), exhibited significantly high RPKM values. No ARGs were found to be significantly enriched in the community wastewater samples. Conclusions: This study highlights the higher diversity and abundance of ARGs, particularly those conferring resistance to aminoglycosides and β-lactam antibiotics including carbapenems, in hospital wastewater than in community wastewater. These findings underscore the importance of continuous resistome monitoring of hospital wastewater as part of the integrated One Health surveillance strategy.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** aminoglycosides (MESH:D000617), beta-lactam (MESH:D047090), carbapenems (MESH:D015780)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

46 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12838039/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12838039