Literature DB >> 32728698

Hospital surveillance predicts community pneumococcal antibiotic resistance in Vietnam.

V T T Dai1, J Beissbarth2, P V Thanh1, P T Hoan1, H N L Thuy1, T N Huu3, K Bright4, C Satzke4,5, E K Mulholland4,6, B Temple2,4,6, H C Smith-Vaughan2,7.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In Vietnam, Streptococcus pneumoniae is a leading cause of disease, including meningitis. Antibiotics are available without physician prescription at community pharmacies and rates of antibiotic non-susceptibility are high. Appropriate treatment and antibiotic stewardship need to be informed by surveillance data.
OBJECTIVES: To report community-based pneumococcal antibiotic susceptibility testing data from children enrolled in a pneumococcal conjugate vaccine trial in Ho Chi Minh City [the Vietnam Pneumococcal Project (ViPP)] and compare these with published hospital-based data from the nationwide Survey of Antibiotic Resistance (SOAR) to determine whether hospital surveillance data provide an informative estimate of circulating pneumococcal resistance.
METHODS: Pneumococcal isolates from 234 nasopharyngeal swabs collected from ViPP participants at 12 months of age underwent antibiotic susceptibility testing using CLSI methods and the data were compared with SOAR data.
RESULTS: Antibiotic susceptibility testing identified penicillin-non-susceptible pneumococci in 93.6% of pneumococcus-positive ViPP swabs (oral, non-meningitis breakpoints). Non-susceptibility to erythromycin, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole, clindamycin and tetracycline also exceeded 79%. MDR, defined as non-susceptibility to three or more classes of antibiotic, was common (94.4% of swabs). Low or no resistance was detected for ceftriaxone (non-meningitis breakpoints), ofloxacin and vancomycin. Antibiotic non-susceptibility rates in ViPP and SOAR were similar for several antibiotics tested.
CONCLUSIONS: A very high proportion of pneumococci carried in the community are MDR. Despite wide disparities in population demographics between ViPP and SOAR, the non-susceptibility rates for several antibiotics were comparable. Thus, with some qualification, hospital antibiotic susceptibility testing data in Vietnam can inform circulating pneumococcal antibiotic non-susceptibility in young children, the group at highest risk of pneumococcal disease, to guide antibiotic prescribing and support surveillance strategies.
© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32728698     DOI: 10.1093/jac/dkaa276

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Antimicrob Chemother        ISSN: 0305-7453            Impact factor:   5.790


  2 in total

1.  Systematic review of the clinical outcomes of pneumonia with a penicillin-group resistant pneumococcus in respiratory and blood culture specimens in children in low- and middle-income countries.

Authors:  Maeve Hume-Nixon; Ruth Lim; Fiona Russell; Hamish Graham; Claire von Mollendorf; Kim Mulholland; Amanda Gwee
Journal:  J Glob Health       Date:  2022-08-22       Impact factor: 7.664

2.  Country data on AMR in Vietnam in the context of community-acquired respiratory tract infections: links between antibiotic susceptibility, local and international antibiotic prescribing guidelines, access to medicines and clinical outcome.

Authors:  Didem Torumkuney; Subhashri Kundu; Giap Van Vu; Hoang Anh Nguyen; Hung Van Pham; Praveen Kamble; Ngoc Truong Ha Lan; Nergis Keles
Journal:  J Antimicrob Chemother       Date:  2022-09-06       Impact factor: 5.758

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.