Prevalence of antimicrobial resistance of Streptococcus pneumoniae in Chinese children: four hospitals surveillance.
- Author:
Xuzhuang SHEN
1
;
Quan LU
;
Qici YE
;
Guocheng ZHANG
;
Sangjie YU
;
Hong ZHANG
;
Qiulian DENG
;
Yonghong YANG
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Anti-Bacterial Agents; pharmacology; Child, Preschool; China; epidemiology; Drug Resistance, Bacterial; Drug Resistance, Multiple; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Prevalence; Respiratory Tract Infections; microbiology; Streptococcus pneumoniae; drug effects; isolation & purification
- From: Chinese Medical Journal 2003;116(9):1304-1307
- CountryChina
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo investigate the nasal carriage of antibiotic-resistant pneumococci in children of < 5 years old in the following four cities, Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Xi'an.
METHODSA total of 647 pneumococci strains were isolated and detected. Minimal inhibition concentrations (MICs) of antibiotics were determined by E-test. Disk diffusion test was used for the measurement of antimicrobial susceptibility.
RESULTSPrevalence of penicillin non-susceptible Streptococcus pneumoniae in the four cities was 41%, with Guangzhou (60.8%) ranking first, followed by Xi'an (45%), Shanghai (37%) and Beijing (25.9%). The majority of penicillin non-susceptibility isolates (23.9% - 53.8%) had a low level of resistance (MIC 0.64 - 1.5 microg/ml). The most sensitive antimicrobials in terms of percentage of susceptible organisms were amoxicillin-clavulanic acid (99.4%), followed by ceftriaxone (92.1%); cefurxime and cefaclor were slightly more sensitive than penicillin with susceptibility of 74.8% and 77.9%. Erythromycin, tetracycline and TMP-SMZ were highly resistant (83.6%, 82.1% and 76.2% respectively). Among erythromycin resistant isolates, 100% were resistant to azithromycin, 98.6% to clarithromycin, 97.2% to roxithromycin and spiramycin, and 96.6% to clindamycin. 97.2% (141/145) were typical of the macrolides-lincosamides-streptogramons B (MLSB) resistance phenotype, and 2.8% (4/145) were M phenotype. The group of PRSP was with significantly higher rates of non-susceptibility for ceftriaxone (18.4%), cefurxime (58.6%), cefaclor (53.4%), compared with the group of PEN-S (0.5%, 1.8% and 0.2%, respectively) and the rate of multi-drug resistance in the isolates of PRSP group (92.9%) was significantly higher than that of PEN-S group (59.2%).
CONCLUSIONThe rates of penicillin and multi-drug resistance among isolates of pneumococci carried nasally in are high children and the high prevalence of multi-drug resistance in the Chinese population may be becoming one of the most serious problems in this century.