Local One Health genomic study reveals widespread dissemination of A. baumannii lineages across Europe
This local One Health genomic epidemiology study analyzed several hundred A. baumannii isolates sourced from clinical, animal, and environmental contexts within a geographically restricted area. The scope of the investigation focused on characterizing the distribution and relatedness of these isolates across different ecological compartments to assess potential transmission dynamics.
The study reported the recovery of globally distributed clinical lineages, described as international clones, alongside livestock- and environment-associated lineages shared across Europe. Additionally, isolates closely related to the emerging clinical lineage IC11 were found in livestock, while epidemic superlineage IC2 was identified in both human and veterinary clinical settings. The authors noted that hospitals host distinct, antibiotic-sensitive endemic populations capable of causing infection, which belong to a diversifying clade spanning clinical and environmental contexts and carry a high load of insertion sequences.
Further observations included plasmid conservation, which suggests frequent horizontal gene transfer across ecological compartments. However, the study did not detect clinically associated lineages outside clinical contexts in the specific instances reported. The authors explicitly highlighted limitations including sparse genomic data and a lack of integrated sampling. Consequently, the practice relevance underscores the need for integrated One Health surveillance to better understand transmission pathways and limit the emergence of clinically adapted strains.