| Literature DB >> 27456093 |
Ashley Bryce1, Céire Costelloe2, Claire Hawcroft3, Mandy Wootton4, Alastair D Hay3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The faecal reservoir provides optimal conditions for the transmission of resistance genes within and between bacterial species. As key transmitters of infection within communities, children are likely important contributors to endemic community resistance. We sought to determine the prevalence of antibiotic-resistant faecal Escherichia coli from asymptomatic children aged between 0 and 17 years worldwide, and investigate the impact of routinely prescribed primary care antibiotics to that resistance.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27456093 PMCID: PMC4960702 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-016-1697-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Data search and extraction (PRISMA flowchart)
Study characteristics of included papers
| Study Characteristics | OECD ( | Non-OECD ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of papers | Reference number | Number of papers | Reference number | |
| Study Design: | ||||
| Retrospective observational | 12 | [ | 10 | [ |
| Prospective observational | 5 | [ | 1 | [ |
| Cross-sectional | 3 | [ | 3 | [ |
| Number of study participants: | ||||
| 0–50 | 1 | [ | 1 | [ |
| 51–100 | 5 | [ | 2 | [ |
| 101–200 | 7 | [ | 2 | [ |
| 201–500 | 4 | [ | 2 | [ |
| 501–1000 | 3 | [ | 5 | [ |
| 1000+ | 0 | 2 | [ | |
| Method of faecal sampling: | ||||
| Stool sample | 14 | [ | 9 | [ |
| Rectal swab | 5 | [ | 5 | [ |
| Stool sample or rectal swab | 1 | [ | 0 | |
| Age range of childrena: | ||||
| Neonates (0–90 days) | 3 | [ | 0 | |
| 0–5 years | 9 | [ | 7 | [ |
| 5–17 years | 4 | [ | 3 | [ |
| 0–17 years | 5 | [ | 4 | [ |
| Antibiotics reported: | ||||
| Ampicillin | 15 | [ | 12 | [ |
| Co-amoxiclav | 5 | [ | 2 | [ |
| Co-trimoxazole | 4 | [ | 10 | [ |
| Trimethoprim | 7 | [ | 2 | [ |
| Nitrofurantoin | 3 | [ | 2 | [ |
| Ciprofloxacin | 4 | [ | 12 | [ |
| Ceftazidime | 4 | [ | 3 | [ |
| Tetracycline | 13 | [ | 10 | [ |
| Chloramphenicol | 11 | [ | 10 | [ |
| Previous exposure to antibioticsb: | ||||
| 0–2 weeks | 2 | [ | 0 | |
| 0–3 weeks | 0 | 1 | [ | |
| 0–1 month | 1 | [ | 0 | |
| 0–3 months | 1 | [ | 1 | [ |
| 0–6 months | 0 | 0 | ||
| 0–1 year | 0 | 0 | ||
aAge 0–5 years: papers which report data specifically for this age group, 6–17 years: papers which report data specifically for this age group; 0–17 years: papers which report data for the children within 0–17 years, and do not fit into the previous reported age groups. Papers may appear more than once depending on how they have reported their results
bIndicates papers which reported information regarding previous exposure to antibiotics and the exposure time periods they investigated
Fig. 2Geographical distribution of OECD and non-OECD countries, including number of included studies per countrya (OECD countries shown in blue) [12]. Faecal carriage of E. coli resistant to ampicillin for each reporting country are shown in red. Authors own map. a One study was conducted in the USA, but also reported resistance data from Venezuela and China, this study therefore appears three times [29]
Pooled prevalence (%) of resistance to antibiotics in faecal E. coli from asymptomatic children (see Additional files 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 for corresponding Forest plots)
| Antibiotics | OECD | Non-OECD | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pooled prevalence | Number of isolates tested | Number of studies | I2 | Ref No. | Pooled prevalence | Number of isolates tested | Number of studies | I2 | Ref No. | |
| Tetracycline | 37.7 % | 2438 | 13 | 19.5 % | [ | 80.0 % | 5401 | 10 | 62.9 % | [ |
| Ampicillin | 37.6 % | 3053 | 15 | 34.6 % | [ | 67.2 % | 6139 | 12 | 58.1 % | [ |
| Trimethoprim | 28.6 % | 862 | 7 | 47.2 % | [ | 81.3 % | 359 | 2 | 50.3 % | [ |
| Chloramphenicol | 13.4 % | 2224 | 11 | 58.1 % | [ | 44.5 % | 5665 | 10 | 39.0 % | [ |
| Co-trimoxazole | 10.8 % | 1007 | 4 | 33.5 % | [ | 59.5 % | 5439 | 10 | 61.4 % | [ |
| Co-amoxiclav | 7.2 % | 1066 | 5 | 37.9 % | [ | 18.1 % | 745 | 2 | 8.8 % | [ |
| Ciprofloxacin | 5.1 % | 586 | 4 | 36.0 % | [ | 9.3 % | 6231 | 12 | 60.3 % | [ |
| Nitrofurantoin | 4.4 % | 673 | 3 | 54.4 % | [ | 7.3 % | 715 | 2 | 0.0 % | [ |
| Ceftazidime | 0.3 % | 177 | 4 | 0.0 % | [ | 5.0 % | 654 | 3 | 28.8 % | [ |
Ordered by pooled resistance prevalence in OECD countries (highest to lowest)
Fig. 3Pooled prevalence (%) of resistance to antibiotics in faecal E. coli from asymptomatic children across different time periods for ampicillin (a and b) and tetracycline (c and d), split by OECD (a and c) and non-OECD (b and d) countries. Studies included more than once reported resistance separately in different age groups or different geographic locations
Fig. 4Meta-analysis of individual studies examining association between previous primary care antibiotic exposure and carriage of bacterial resistance. The Forest plot shows pooled crude and individual OR (log scale) for resistance in asymptomatic children’s faecal E. coli bacteria and previous exposure to any antibiotic. Studies grouped according to time period during which exposure was measured and ordered within each time period by increasing standard error