Clinical Infectious Diseases
SUPPLEMENT ARTICLE
Antibiotic Resistance and Typhoid
Zoe A. Dyson,1,a Elizabeth J. Klemm,1,2,a Sophie Palmer,1 and Gordon Dougan1,2
1
Multiple drug (antibiotic) resistance (MDR) has become a major threat to the treatment of typhoid and other infectious diseases.
Since the 1970s, this threat has increased in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi, driven in part by the emergence of successful genetic
clades, such as haplotype H58, associated with the MDR phenotype. H58 S. Typhi can express multiple antibiotic resistance determinants while retaining the ability to efficiently transmit and persist within the human population. The recent identification of extensively drug resistant S. Typhi only highlights the dangers of ignoring this threat. Here we discuss the evolution of the S. Typhi MDR
phenotype and consider options for management.
Keywords. multiple drug resistance; MDR; S. Typhi; H58; typhoid.
Since the introduction of antibiotics in the middle of the last
century, there has been an increasing appreciation of the threat
of antibiotic resistance [1, 2]. Following the first clinical use of
penicillin, many other antibiotics have been introduced and, in
each case, resistance has followed at some level. The threat of
resistance has been compounded by a dramatic reduction in the
rate of introduction of novel classes of antibiotics and an associated drop in investment in the area (https://amr-review.org). We
are now in an era where the levels of circulating virulent, multiple drug-resistant (MDR) bacteria threatens healthcare efficacy
globally. Typhoid treatment was one of the key areas that immediately benefited from antibiotic usage. This chronic infection
with the potential for relapse, carriage, and complications was
enormously challenging in terms of clinical management prior
to antibiotics. Indeed, antibiotic treatment transformed the
clinical management of the disease and the public’s perception of the threat the disease posed. Antibiotics, together with
improved water treatment and better public health management, led to the control of the disease, at least in economically
developed settings. However, typhoid remains in economically
deprived areas where poverty and poor infrastructure persisted
[3]. In these same resource-limited settings, the indiscriminate
use of antibiotics has encouraged resistance and selected for virulent MDR clades. Thus, antibiotic resistance in typhoid is now
a clinical and economic challenge.
a
Z. A. D. and E. J. K. contributed equally.
Correspondence: G. Dougan, Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge, 5th Fl,
Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Hills Rd, Cambridge CB2 0SP, United Kingdom (
[email protected].
ac.uk).
Clinical Infectious Diseases®
2019;68(S2):S165–70
© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society
of America. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted
reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciy1111
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi (S. Typhi) is a subtype
of the Gram-negative enteric pathogen Salmonella enterica.
Unlike many other S. enterica serovars, S. Typhi is a human
restricted pathogen that, as far as we know, is propagated by
human to human spread with no zoonotic reservoir and with a
limited ability to survive longer term in the environment [4]. S.
Typhi can persist in water and food contaminated with human
fecal material, but there is no environmentally adapted stage of
the bacterial life-cycle such as the formation of spores. The persistence of S. Typhi in human populations is influenced by clinically silent carriage within certain individuals (carriers) that
can be infected for months and even years with periodic shedding of S. Typhi into the environment in contaminated feces.
Thus, antibiotic usage can influence both acute typhoid disease
and the carrier state. In both states the emergence of antibiotic
resistance is theoretically possible. Unlike other enteric bacteria, genetic and phenotypic analysis (eg, through the controlled
challenge of human volunteers) has indicated that S. Typhi is
relatively poorly adapted for growth in the human intestine
[5]. Indeed, many genes, for example, shdA associated with
persistence in the intestine are inactivated in S. Typhi and are
consequently known as pseudogenes [6]. S. Typhi also shows
limited evidence of recombination with other bacteria, suggesting the global population of S. Typhi is relatively isolated
compared to other enteric bacteria that live free in the intestine or environment [7]. This, theoretically, limits their relative
ability to horizontally acquire genes, including those that are
encoded on genetically mobile elements. Nevertheless, over
the past 70 years, multiple antibiotic resistance in S. Typhi has
emerged as a global threat.
THE EARLY EMERGENCE OF ANTIBIOTIC
RESISTANCE IN S. TYPHI
Shortly after the introduction of chloramphenicol for the treatment of typhoid, reports of resistance in S. Typhi began to
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Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge, and 2Wellcome Sanger Institute, Wellcome Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge, United Kingdom
MDR S. TYPHI BECAME A THREAT TO TREATMENT
During this period (1970–90) typhoid frequently occurred in
regions with limited facilities for culturing S. Typhi and consequently the levels of MDR remained largely unreported and
likely underappreciated. However, the Wellcome Trust and
Oxford University established a Clinical Unit in Ho Chi Minh
City in Vietnam in conjunction with the Vietnamese government, and a local program of typhoid surveillance involving
blood culture and antibiotic susceptibility testing was established. It quickly became clear that MDR was associated with
up to 90% of the typhoid cases in Ho Chi Minh City and in
a rural study area in the Mekong Delta [11]. This, in part,
explained a high level of clinical relapse, intestinal perforation,
and poor response to treatment. Other reports coming in from
elsewhere, including India [12], resulted in a rethink about the
treatment of typhoid, and the use of fluoroquinolones in the
form of ciprofloxacin was advocated [13]. To that point, the
use of fluoroquinolones in children was not common due to
reported side effects associated with joint/cartilage damage.
Nevertheless, the present threat of MDR encouraged ethically
supported trials of ciprofloxacin in the treatment of typhoid,
and this was reported as being very effective with a low level
of clinical relapse. However, within a few years of the introduction of ofloxacin treatment, S. Typhi exhibiting significant
S166 • CID 2019:68 (Suppl 2) • Dyson et al
resistance to quinolones (nalidixic acid) and intermediate levels of resistance to ofloxacin were reported in the same region
[14]. The targets of fluoroquinolones are the DNA gyrase
subunits encoded by genes gyrA and gyrB, as well as DNA
topoisomerase IV components parC and parE. “Signature”
mutations including those at codon positions 83 and 87 in the
gyrA gene sequence are associated with resistance. These signature mutations were identified in the nalidixic acid resistant
derivatives of S. Typhi in Vietnam [15].
Over the next decade, the use of ciprofloxacin for the treatment of typhoid, and indeed other infections, became widespread across parts of Asia, and the reports of resistance began
to increase in general frequency.
THE EMERGENCE OF MDR CLADES OF S. TYPHI
As part of the studies on MDR S. Typhi in Vietnam, work was
initiated to use molecular approaches including pulse field gel
electrophoresis (PFGE) to characterize the S. Typhi and start to
understand the population structure of the pathogen. An aim
here was to try to track transmission and identify outbreaks in
a region with a high level of endemic disease. It was quickly
noted that the PFGE patterns of S. Typhi isolated before 1990
were diverse, but those isolated after this time onward became
increasingly conserved as one PFGE type [16]. S. Typhi itself
is highly clonal compared to many other pathogens, and this
characteristic confounded the epidemiological investigations.
This observation remained of interest, but the limitations of
the techniques meant that this phenomenon remained unexplained. However, it was noted that all MDR S. Typhi harbored
a large, transferrable R factor of incompatibility group IncHI1,
the same group as the plasmid identified in Mexico in 1970 [17].
Over the next years, the interest in bacterial population
structures increased as the technologies advanced. Techniques
such as multi locus sequence typing (MLST) were invented, but
they were not sufficiently discriminatory to provide further resolution of the population structure of S. Typhi, which is largely a
single MLST type. Further advances into molecular typing using
rare single nucleotide polymorphisms in the bacterial genome
were eventually developed and applied to a global collection
of S. Typhi [7]. These studies identified an emerging subtype,
known as a haplotype, of S. Typhi designated H58 that was associated with both MDR and fluoroquinolone resistance signature mutations in gyrA. Importantly, S. Typhi H58 were found
in many countries in Asia and were becoming more common
in more recent isolates. The conserved PFGE MDR clade found
in Vietnam was identified as haplotype H58. S. Typhi H58 frequently harbored MDR plasmids of IncHI1 type.
WHOLE GENOME SEQUENCING OF S. TYPHI
In 2000, the first complete genome sequence of an MDR S. Typhi
known as CT18 from Vietnam was reported [6]. S. Typhi CT18
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emerge [8]. These tended to be reports of sporadic resistance
associated with clinical failures and because new antibiotics
were being introduced on a regular basis, particularly in the
1950–70s, this was largely regarded as a nuisance rather than
a crisis. As S. Typhi has an unusual fastidious intracellular lifestyle in vivo, some antibiotics worked much better than others, and chloramphenicol became one of the “go to” antibiotics
for this disease. The potential side effects of chloramphenicol
dampened this enthusiasm to some extent, but cheaper antibiotics continued to be favored in resource-poor settings.
During the 1960s, resistance to 3 or more first-line (multiple) antibiotics including ampicillin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and chloramphenicol, known as MDR, became
more common, and MDR S. Typhi began to be reported more
frequently. In 1972 a large MDR typhoid epidemic, with over
10 000 reported cases, occurred in Mexico City and other parts
of Mexico [9, 10]. The epidemic S. Typhi commonly exhibited
resistance to chloramphenicol, tetracycline, streptomycin, and
sulphonamides and encoded an R factor plasmid that was transferable to Escherichia coli. Some S. Typhi isolates from the epidemic also encoded resistance to ampicillin and/or kanamycin,
but fortunately these never became dominant. Eventually, this
epidemic subsided and remained a local phenomenon confined
largely within Mexico. Other sporadic cases of MDR S. Typhi
were reported in different countries over the next 2 decades, but
these also did not become dominant.
Table 1.
dominant in West Africa. Interestingly, IncHI1 plasmids are not
always present in newer S. Typhi isolates that express the MDR
phenotype. Instead, regions of the composite transposon present on the IncHI1 plasmids have integrated into the S. Typhi
chromosome, into at least 2 different genetic loci on multiple
occasions. This was concerning in that chromosomally integrated DNA tends to be more stable and is less likely to be lost
compared to a plasmid. Additionally, this highly fluid genetic
region could act as a hot spot for sampling other genetic material taken up from the environment. Fluoroquinolone signature
mutations are less common in S. Typhi from Africa than Asia,
More recently a S. Typhi H58 “triple mutant” clade possessing
2 signature mutations in gyrA (codon 83 and 87) and a third in
parC (codon 80) has been observed in Nepal as well as India
and has been associated with a lack of fluoroquiolone efficacy
[22, 23]. The reduced frequency of these mutations in Africa
may be a reflection of the use of this class of antibiotics on the
different continents [19].
Interestingly in West Africa, the evolution of MDR in S.
Typhi appears to have taken a different path as H58 isolates
have not become established there [24, 25]. Instead S. Typhi of
haplotype H56 (3.1.1) that harbor a range of different R factor
types, including some of IncHI1 type, have become established,
for example, in Nigeria and Ghana. The genomic evidence indicates that several of these West African MDR clades have spread
extensively in the region, crossing into multiple countries and
causing sustained outbreaks. Similar clades have also been
found in the Republic of Congo suggesting widespread typhoid
in the region [26].
THE EMERGENCE OF EXTENSIVELY RESISTANT
S. TYPHI
In 2017, reports emerged of a large outbreak in Sindh, Pakistan,
of a S. Typhi expressing resistance to classical first-line antibiotics
(chloramphenicol, ampicillin, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole), as well as to both fluoroquinolones and third-generation
cephalosporins. These infections can only be resolved with azithromycin, carbapenems (meropenem) and tigecycline (Table
1). Because only one of these remaining antibiotics can be
Treatment Options for Different Resistance Classes of S. Typhi
Antibiotic
MDR
Pakistan XDR
Chloramphenicol
Oral, intravenous
Route of Administration
X
X
Co-trimoxazole
Oral, intravenous
X
X
Ampicillin
Oral, intramuscular, intravenous
X
X
Ciprofloxacin
Oral, intravenous
X
Ceftriaxone
Intramuscular, intravenous
X
Azithromycin
Oral
Meropenem
Intravenous
Tigecycline
Intravenous
Abbreviations: MDR, multiple drug resistance; XDR, extensively drug resistant.
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is not H58, but it does harbor a classical S. Typhi-associated
transferrable R plasmid named pHCM1. pHCM1 encodes resistance genes for all first-line antibiotics used for the treatment of
typhoid fever and is highly related to R27, an IncHI1 plasmid
that was first isolated in the 1960s from S. enterica. pHCM1
has acquired additional genes compared to R27, predominantly
at 2 points with 18 genes encoding resistance to antibiotics
and heavy metals. Multiple transposon-like and integrases/
transposases are encoded around these 2 regions suggesting a
recombination hotspot. Antibiotic resistance genes encoded on
pHCM1 include dhfr1b (trimethoprim), sul2 (sulphonamide),
catI (chloramphenicol), bla (TEM-1; ampicillin), tetA/tetC
(tetracyclines), and strAB (streptomycin). Further comparative
analysis of IncHI1 plasmids showed that these plasmids were
highly conserved in their broad framework but showed some
variation at these two recombinatorial hotspots.
With the introduction of next generation sequencing the
analysis of thousands of S. Typhi at the whole genome level
rapidly became feasible and currently several thousand S.
Typhi have been sequenced [18–21]. These data provide an
enormous expanding database that has been used to define the
global S. Typhi population structure and to analyze the antibiotic resistance signatures of individual isolates and clades. All
currently circulating S. Typhi have a common ancestor and can
be regarded as a monophyletic clade that entered the human
population from an unknown source several thousand years
ago. MDR isolates can be found around the phylogenetic tree,
but over 50% of recent isolates belong to clade H58 with a significant proportion of these harboring MDR and fluoroquinolone resistance alleles [19].
However, clear evolutionary patterns can be detected. S. Typhi
H58 isolates are widely distributed in Asia and the Middle East
region. In addition, there have been at least 3 recent independent introductions of S. Typhi H58 into the African continent
that have become established. These 3 “waves” are currently
still present in Kenya, and the H58 introductions have spread
across East Africa through several countries including Uganda,
Tanzania, Zaire, and Malawi. S. Typhi H58 isolates have also
entered Zimbabwe and South Africa but have not become
Subsequent genome analysis showed the clade harbored a very
large pool of resistance determinants, with the chromosomally
integrated composite resistance loci and an additional novel IncY
plasmid encoding a blaCTX-M-15 extended-spectrum β-lactamase
gene and a qnrS fluoroquinolone resistance gene (Figure 1).
It is concerning that the blaCTX-M-15 and qnrS are encoded on the
same plasmid raising the potential that treatment with one of
the target antibiotic may favor the retention of both genes. The
Figure 1. Outline genetic structure of XDR S. Typhi in Pakistan. A, Oval outlines represent individual bacteria harboring chromosome (wiggly, green) and plasmid (red and
blue circles) elements. Red and blue triangles represent acquired resistance loci. Small purple triangles represent SNPs in the chromosome associated with resistance. B,
Detailed structures with color codes as per A of the different acquired resistance elements on plasmid and chromosome. Abbreviations: AMR, antimicrobial resistance; MDR,
multiple drug resistance; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism; XDR, extensively drug resistant.
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administered orally, this presents a difficult and costly treatment
practice, which is especially challenging in resource-limited settings. This outbreak stimulated an emergency response involving
public health management and a typhoid vaccination campaign.
The isolates were eventually classified as being “extensively drug
resistant”[XDR] [27, 28]. Whole-genome sequencing of representative XDR isolates confirmed that this was indeed an outbreak
involving a highly conserved subclade of the H58 haplotype.
WHAT NEXT?
These recent developments involving XDR isolates highlights
the evolving threat of antibiotic resistance in S. Typhi and the
value of antibiotic susceptibility testing linked to genomic
analysis. Thus, we need to develop further low-cost diagnostic tools and kits that can be used in the field to rapidly
detect such strains. Such tools should be linked to an open
access, global database of whole genome-based sequences of
S. Typhi. Such databases do exist in various DNA sequence
repositories, but they are not readily accessible to groups
or organizations not well trained in the genomic sciences.
We need to develop simple software that can be used to
rapidly select diagnostic signatures from these data that
can be quickly used to modify and update diagnostic tools.
Isothermal polymerase chain reaction technologies are being
developed that are relatively inexpensive and can work on
simple platforms such as dipsticks and these will be vital,
potentially along with better serological and culture-based
technologies for typhoid. These diagnostic approaches will be
used in conjunction with the implementation of better public
health management approaches including vaccine campaigns
to bring typhoid under control in endemic regions. However,
it should be noted that vaccination would likely not specifically target resistant oversensitive isolates, but it would at
least reduce the overall typhoid disease burden.
Finally, it should be noted that the incidence of MDR in
typhoid is variable over time. As antibiotic treatment practices change, the selective pressure profile is altered, and the
incidence of MDR typhoid has been observed to increase and
decrease over time in a particular geographical region. This
suggests that selection is playing a significant role in the maintenance of the resistance phenotype and that better antibiotic
stewardship could have a beneficial impact.
Notes
Disclaimer. The findings and conclusions contained within are those
of the authors and do not necessarily reflect positions or policies of the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The views expressed are those of the
authors and not necessarily those of the National Health Service (NHS),
the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), or the Department of
Health and Social Care.
Financial support. This publication is based on research funded in
part by a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation [OPP1151153].
In addition, this work was supported by The Wellcome Trust (grants
STRATAA, 106158 and 098051) and by the NIHR (Cambridge Biomedical
Research Centre at the Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation
Trust).
Supplement sponsorship. This supplement is sponsored by the Center
for Vaccine Development and Global Health (CVD) at the University of
Maryland School of Medicine.
Potential conflicts of interest. All authors: No reported conflicts.
All authors have submitted the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential
Conflicts of Interest. Conflicts that the editors consider relevant to the content of the manuscript have been disclosed.
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