When the Trojan horse is unable to reach inside the city: investigation of the mechanism of resistance behind the first reported cefiderocol-resistant E. coli in Canada.
Kevin R BarkerGabriel W RebickKen FakharuddinClayton MacDonaldMichael R MulveyLaura F MatasejePublished in: Microbiology spectrum (2024)
Gram-negative metallo-β-lactamase-producing bacteria can be extremely problematic, especially when found to be extensively drug-resistant (XDR). Cefiderocol is a novel antimicrobial that has been shown to overcome most carbapenemases, with very rare resistance reported to date. Within our institution, two multidrug-resistant and one XDR strains were isolated from a patient who recently emigrated from India. Each isolate underwent whole-genome sequencing to resolve plasmids and determine phylogenetics, strain typing, and mechanisms of resistance. The XDR E. coli was ST167, harbored NDM-5, cirA and PBP3 mutations, consistent with cefiderocol resistance. Our study suggests that the NDM region is required in conjunction with cirA and PBP3 mutations. It is not clear why; however, our study did determine a potential novel iron-transport region unique to the cefiderocol-resistant isolate. This is the first characterized cefiderocol-resistant E.coli reported from Canada. Health centers should be on alert for this clone.IMPORTANCEThe development of cefiderocol, a novel siderophore cephalosporin, has provided additional options to the treatment of extensively drug-resistant (XDR) Gram-negative bacteria. Resistance to cefiderocol is poorly understood and only recently described. Here, we describe a case of a patient with recent travel to India harboring three Escherichia coli isolates, one resistant and two susceptible to cefiderocol. Two isolates are highly similar genetically, allowing the mechanism of resistance to be described more closely. The importance of this manuscript contributes both globally to the understanding of cefiderocol resistance in E. coli as well as nationally as this is the first resistant case reported in Canada. This is especially concerning as cefiderocol is not currently approved in Canada. The implications of reporting emerging resistance to new antimicrobials for XDR Gram negatives are impactful to infectious disease specialists, clinical microbiologists, physicians, and public health.