Literature DB >> 25232779

Bacterial etiology of acute otitis media and characterization of pneumococcal serotypes and genotypes among children in Moscow, Russia.

Nikolay Mayanskiy1, Natalia Alyabieva, Olga Ponomarenko, Alexander Pakhomov, Tatiana Kulichenko, Alexander Ivanenko, Maria Lazareva, Anna Lazareva, Lubovj Katosova, Leila Namazova-Baranova, Alexander Baranov.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We aimed to describe bacterial etiology of acute otitis media (AOM) and characterize resistance, serotypes and genotype profiles of AOM-causing pneumococci recovered in Moscow children.
METHODS: Children with AOM and an available middle ear fluid specimen were prospectively enrolled in this study. Streptococcus pneumoniae, Streptococcus pyogenes, Haemophilus influenzae and Moraxella catarrhalis were considered as true otopathogens. All pneumococcal isolates were serotyped using the Quellung reaction; multidrug-resistant (MDR) pneumococci underwent multilocus sequence typing.
RESULTS: In 172 of 541 enrolled AOM patients (32%) at least 1 otopathogen was recovered, with S. pneumoniae having the highest rate of 63% (109/172). When adjusted for antibiotic treatment before sampling, in untreated patients the rate of culture-positive AOM was 35% (124/352), S. pneumoniae had a prevalence of 69% (86/124), S. pyogenes 19% (24/124), H. influenzae 13% (16/124) and M. catarrhalis 9% (11/124). Among 107 examined pneumococci, 45% were penicillin-nonsusceptible, 34 and 30% were resistant to erythromycin and clindamycin, respectively; 30% had an MDR phenotype, but no amoxicillin-resistant isolates were found. Ten of 32 (31%) MDR pneumococci related to clonal complex 320, the remaining isolates belonged to 7 different clonal complex. Six leading serotypes were 19F (27%), 3 (12%), 6B (11%), 14 (11%), 19A (9%) and 23F (8%); overall polysaccharide conjugate vaccine13 coverage was 93%.
CONCLUSIONS: S. pneumoniae, the leading bacterial AOM pathogen in Moscow children, is characterized by a substantial rate of antibiotic nonsusceptibility and clonality. A polysaccharide conjugate vaccine with expanded coverage seems to fit the current AOM pneumococcal serotype distribution in Russia better.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25232779     DOI: 10.1097/INF.0000000000000554

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Infect Dis J        ISSN: 0891-3668            Impact factor:   2.129


  8 in total

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3.  Immunogenicity and protective immunity against otitis media caused by pneumococcus in mice of Hib conjugate vaccine with PsaA protein carrier.

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5.  Antimicrobial resistance, penicillin-binding protein sequences, and pilus islet carriage in relation to clonal evolution of Streptococcus pneumoniae serotype 19A in Russia, 2002-2013.

Authors:  N Mayanskiy; T Savinova; N Alyabieva; O Ponomarenko; E Brzhozovskaya; A Lazareva; L Katosova; R Kozlov
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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-01-26       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae strains in children with acute otitis media- high risk of persistent colonization after treatment.

Authors:  Izabela Korona-Glowniak; Piotr Zychowski; Radoslaw Siwiec; Elżbieta Mazur; Grażyna Niedzielska; Anna Malm
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8.  Detection of respiratory pathogens in pediatric acute otitis media by PCR and comparison of findings in the middle ear and nasopharynx.

Authors:  Svetlana Yatsyshina; Nikolay Mayanskiy; Olga Shipulina; Tatiana Kulichenko; Natalia Alyabieva; Lyubovj Katosova; Anna Lazareva; Tatyana Skachkova; Maria Elkina; Svetlana Matosova; German Shipulin
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  8 in total

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