Literature DB >> 19830357

New susceptibility breakpoints in antimicrobial resistance rates of invasive pneumococcal strains.

Paula Carolina Bejo Wolkers1, Orlando Cesar Mantese, Alan de Paula, Vivieni Vieira Prado Almeida, Paula Augusta Dias Fogaça de Aguiar, Jackelline Rodrigues Alvares, Samanta Cristine Grassi Almeida, Maria Cristina de Cunto Brandileone.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the impact of new penicillin susceptibility breakpoints on resistance rates of pneumococcal strains collected from children with pneumonia.
METHODS: Pneumococcal strains collected from patients admitted with pneumonia were isolated at the clinical analysis lab of Hospital de Clínicas de Uberlândia, Uberlândia, Brazil, and sent to Instituto Adolfo Lutz, São Paulo, Brazil, for further identification, serotyping and determination of antimicrobial susceptibility.
RESULTS: From April 1999 to December 2008, 330 strains of pneumococcus were sent to Instituto Adolfo Lutz; of these, 195 (59%) were collected from patients with pneumonia. One hundred strains collected from patients < or = 12 years old were analyzed. The patients' age ranged from 1 to 12.6 years old (with mean age of 2.4 and median of 1.7 years). Forty-seven patients were male. The strains were isolated from blood (42%) and pleural fluid (58%). There were 35 oxacillin-resistant strains: according to the criteria defined by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) in 2007 [minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) < or = 0.06 microg/mL for susceptibility (S), 0.12 to 1 microg/mL for intermediate resistance (IR), and > or = 2 microg/mL for full resistance (FR)], 22 strains had IR and 11 strains had FR. According to the current breakpoints defined by the CLSI in 2008 (< or = 2 microg/mL for S, 4 microg/mL for IR and > or = 8 microg/mL for FR), only one strain had IR to penicillin. There was resistance to co-trimoxazole (80%), tetracycline (21%), erythromycin (13%), clindamycin (13%), and ceftriaxone (one strain simultaneously resistant to penicillin).
CONCLUSIONS: When the new breakpoints for in vitro susceptibility were applied, penicillin resistance rates dropped 97%, from 33 to 1%.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19830357     DOI: 10.2223/JPED.1931

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pediatr (Rio J)        ISSN: 0021-7557            Impact factor:   2.197


  3 in total

1.  Penicillin susceptibility breakpoints for Streptococcus pneumoniae and their effect on susceptibility categorisation in Germany (1997-2013).

Authors:  M Imöhl; R R Reinert; P M Tulkens; M van der Linden
Journal:  Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis       Date:  2014-06-15       Impact factor: 3.267

2.  Outcome of children hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia treated with aqueous penicillin G.

Authors:  Raquel Simbalista; Marcelo Araújo; Cristiana M Nascimento-Carvalho
Journal:  Clinics (Sao Paulo)       Date:  2011       Impact factor: 2.365

3.  Impact of the revised penicillin susceptibility breakpoints for Streptococcus pneumoniae on antimicrobial resistance rates of meningeal and non-meningeal pneumococcal strains.

Authors:  Badria R Al-Waili; Sahar Al-Thawadi; Sami Al Hajjar
Journal:  Ann Saudi Med       Date:  2013 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 1.526

  3 in total

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