Families Share E. coli

And that includes the pets. Since I saw the 'TV version' while at the gym yesterday, that spurred me to get around to discussing this article about the transmission of E. coli within families.

In the article, the authors sampled at least seven isolates* of E. coli from 152 people and 76 pets, and then genetically typed them. Within households, pets were most likely to share genetically identical E. coli (58% of possible 'pet-pet' pairs), followed by adult-child (34%), child-child (33%), adult-adult (24%), adult-pet (18%), and child-pet (15%). What's interesting is that only 12% of shared strains were shared between adults, meaning most transmission of E. coli is not between sexual partners**.

While it's obvious why this story made it to the teevee machine ("Is your pet giving you the dangerous bacterium E. coli?"), this has real consequences for human health. E. coli is the major bacterium responsible for urinary tract infections (>75%), and most E. coli that can cause UTIs primarily live in your GI tract as harmless commensals (they are often referred to as 'opportunistic pathogens'). For someone who is prone to having UTIs, her family can serve as a reservoir of disease-causing strains, even though they themselves are asymptomatic. Therefore, we should autoclave her family.

Kidding.

But this might mean that to treat a woman who chronically has UTIs, we might want to consider simultaneously treating her entire family, so they don't 'refinfect' her.

*Seven isolates were taken from each person, along with one isolate chosen from ten different media with antibiotics added (not every person had isolates that were resistant to every antibiotic).

**No jokes about 'animal companions' please...

Cited article: Johnson JR, Owens K, Gajewski A, Clabots C. Escherichia coli colonization patterns among human household members and pets, with attention to acute urinary tract infection. J Infect Dis. 2008 Jan 15;197(2):218-24.

More like this

Yes, this is O157:H7, not ExPEC. Bully for you. One thing regarding popular accounts of antibiotic resistance I've noticed is that there is an overemphasis on the evolution of resistance, and an underemphasis on the spread of resistant bacteria. While the evolution of resistance is important,…
How antibiotic resistant your E. coli are has to do with where you've been, not what you eat. A recent study isolated E. coli from 567 newly hospitalized patients and 100 vegetarians (one E. coli isolate per person), and screened them for resistance to X antibiotics, including ciprofloxacin,…
I've written before about CTX-M-15 beta-lactamases which make bacteria resistant to most cephalosporin antibiotics--those antibiotics that begin with cef- (or ceph-) or end with -cillin. I've also discussed the role of clonal spread in the rise of antibiotic resistance: most (but obviously not…
After I reported this recent and interesting research paper about urinary tract inflictions, a number of conversations broke out on that post, on my facebook page, and via email, and some of these conversations raised the question of cranberry juice and whether the idea that it prevents, reduces,…

Seven isolates were taken from each person, along with one isolate chosen from ten different media with antibiotics added (not every person had isolates that were resistant to every antibiotic