Insects, Rodents, and Pets as Reservoirs, Vectors, and Sentinels of Antimicrobial Resistance.
Willis GwenziNhamo ChaukuraNorah Muisa-ZikaliCharles TetaTendai MusvuugwaPiotr RzymskiAkebe Luther King AbiaPublished in: Antibiotics (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
This paper reviews the occurrence of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in insects, rodents, and pets. Insects (e.g., houseflies, cockroaches), rodents (rats, mice), and pets (dogs, cats) act as reservoirs of AMR for first-line and last-resort antimicrobial agents. AMR proliferates in insects, rodents, and pets, and their skin and gut systems. Subsequently, insects, rodents, and pets act as vectors that disseminate AMR to humans via direct contact, human food contamination, and horizontal gene transfer. Thus, insects, rodents, and pets might act as sentinels or bioindicators of AMR. Human health risks are discussed, including those unique to low-income countries. Current evidence on human health risks is largely inferential and based on qualitative data, but comprehensive statistics based on quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA) are still lacking. Hence, tracing human health risks of AMR to insects, rodents, and pets, remains a challenge. To safeguard human health, mitigation measures are proposed, based on the one-health approach. Future research should include human health risk analysis using QMRA, and the application of in-silico techniques, genomics, network analysis, and 'big data' analytical tools to understand the role of household insects, rodents, and pets in the persistence, circulation, and health risks of AMR.
Keyphrases
- antimicrobial resistance
- risk assessment
- human health
- endothelial cells
- big data
- health risk
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells
- healthcare
- heavy metals
- climate change
- public health
- adipose tissue
- randomized controlled trial
- systematic review
- single cell
- drinking water
- high resolution
- dna methylation
- soft tissue
- insulin resistance
- deep learning
- skeletal muscle
- gene therapy