The Norwegian Klebsiella pneumoniae network: K. pneumoniae population structure and antimicrobial resistance in a One Health perspective
Informations
- Funding country
Norway
- Acronym
- -
- URL
- -
- Start date
- 1/1/2019
- End date
- 12/31/2024
- Budget
- 246,000 EUR
Fundings
Name | Role | Start | End | Amount |
---|---|---|---|---|
BEDREHELSE - Better health and wellbeing | Grant | - | - | 245,999 EUR |
Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a threat to the global public health. Klebsiella pneumoniae has emerged as a high-risk pathogen in humans due to the increasing levels of antibiotic resistance to our most used antibiotics, and the bacterias ability to cause severe disease, especially in severe ill and immunocompromised patients. Infections caused by multidrug resistant K. pneumoniae may be very challenging, and in some cases, impossible to treat. Recent outbreaks of K. pneumoniae in several Norwegian hospitals, including the neonatal intensive care unit at Stavanger University Hospital, illustrate our own vulnerability. K. pneumoniae has so far mainly been associated with hospital-acquired infections and outbreaks. However, this bacterium is ubiquitous in the environment, and may colonize and infect animals and humans. So far, K. pneumoniae has not been considered a zoonotic pathogen, and therefore not been a subject for surveys in the food production chain. Consequently, more knowledge considering the role of K. pneumoniae as a commensal in animals and humans, and the contribution of foodborne K. pneumoniae to human infection needs to be addressed. In terms of public health and food safety, such knowledge is fundamental in our approaches to elucidate transmission lines between reservoirs and containment of this important pathogen. The partners of the proposed network represent the fields of human and veterinary microbiology and medicine, environmental microbiology, and food safety. NOR-KLEB-NET will continue to enable an important cross-compartment collaboration between different sectors and with international leading scientists. NOR-KLEB-NET focus on the evolution and spread of AMR in K. pneumoniae from a One Health perspective, encompassing this pathogens ability to colonize and possibly disseminate between humans, animals, food, and environment, and to cause severe and difficult to treat infections in humans and animals. Partners from NOR-KLEB-NET achieved in 2019 in collaboration with international partners funding from the Trond Mohn Foundation for the AMR One Health project KLEB-GAP (Klebsiella pneumoniae – a key driver in the global spread of antimicrobial resistance and a target for new approaches in diagnostics, surveillance and alternative therapeutics). In this project we aim to 1) study the population structure of K. pneumoniae by whole genome sequencing, including antimicrobial resistance and virulence features, in several collections of K. pneumoniae from healthy and infected humans, animals and the marine environment; 2) explore new methods, including metagenomics, for detection and surveillance of K. pneumoniae; 3) identify novel genes associated with virulence or AMR in K. pneumoniae using advanced bioinformatics and biostatistics methods; and 4) pre-clinical evaluation of selected bacteriophages as an alternative treatment option for multidrug resistant K. pneumoniae.