| Literature DB >> 34063317 |
Răzvan-Cosmin Petca1,2, Silvius Negoiță1,3, Cristian Mareș1,2, Aida Petca1,4, Răzvan-Ionuț Popescu1,2, Călin Bogdan Chibelean5,6.
Abstract
Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are a leading cause of morbidity for both males and females. The overconsumption of antibiotics in general medicine, veterinary, or agriculture has led to a spike in drug-resistant microorganisms; obtaining standardized results is imposed by standard definitions for various categories of drug-resistant bacteria-such as multiple-drug resistant (MDR), extensive drug-resistant (XDR), and pan drug-resistant (PDR). This retrospective study conducted in three university teaching hospitals in Romania has analyzed urine probes from 15,231 patients, of which 698 (4.58%) presented multidrug-resistant strains. Escherichia coli was the leading uropathogen 283 (40.54%), presenting the highest resistance to quinolones (R = 72.08%) and penicillin (R = 66.78%) with the most important patterns of resistance for penicillin, sulfonamides, and quinolones (12.01%) and aminoglycosides, aztreonam, cephalosporins, and quinolones (9.89%). Klebsiella spp. followed-260 (37.24%) with the highest resistance to amoxicillin-clavulanate (R = 94.61%) and cephalosporins (R = 94.23%); the leading patterns were observed for aminoglycosides, aminopenicillins + β-lactams inhibitor, sulfonamides, and cephalosporins (12.69%) and aminoglycosides, aztreonam, cephalosporins, quinolones (9.23%). The insufficient research of MDR strains on the Romanian population is promoting these findings as an important tool for any clinician treating MDR-UTIs.Entities:
Keywords: AMR; Escherichia coli; Klebsiella; MDR; UTIs; antibiotic resistance; urinary tract infections; uropathogens
Year: 2021 PMID: 34063317 PMCID: PMC8147389 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics10050523
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
MDR isolated uropathogens.
| Isolated Bacteria | BCH | EUH | MCH | Total | ||||
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| Gram negative | 226 | 86.25 | 266 | 95.68 | 152 | 96.20 | 644 | 92.26 |
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| 75 | 28.62 | 109 | 39.20 | 99 | 62.65 | 283 | 40.54 |
| 114 | 43.51 | 111 | 39.92 | 35 | 22.15 | 260 | 37.24 | |
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| 20 | 7.63 | 29 | 10.43 | 11 | 6.96 | 60 | 8.59 |
| 17 | 6.48 | 17 | 6.11 | 7 | 4.43 | 41 | 5.87 | |
| Gram positive | 36 | 13.74 | 12 | 4.31 | 6 | 3.79 | 54 | 7.73 |
| 13 | 4.96 | 11 | 3.95 | 6 | 3.79 | 30 | 4.29 | |
| 23 | 8.77 | 1 | 0.35 | - | - | 24 | 3.43 | |
n—number, %—percentage, BCH—Burghele Clinical Hospital, EUH—Elias University Hospital, and MCH—Mures County Hospital.
Figure 1Distribution of the MDR uropathogens in the study centers.
Female and male age group distribution of the MDR uropathogens.
| Age Groups (Years) | Females | Males | Total | |||
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| 18–29 | 18 | 6.45 | 28 | 6.68 | 46 | 6.59 |
| 30–39 | 14 | 5.01 | 9 | 2.14 | 23 | 3.29 |
| 40–49 | 16 | 5.73 | 15 | 3.57 | 31 | 4.44 |
| 50–59 | 33 | 11.82 | 33 | 7.87 | 66 | 9.45 |
| 60–69 | 69 | 24.73 | 126 | 30.07 | 195 | 27.93 |
| ≥70 | 129 | 46.23 | 208 | 49.64 | 337 | 48.28 |
n—number and %—percentage.
Figure 2Gram-negative uropathogen resistance profiles (AG—aminoglycosides, AM + C—amoxicillin + clavulanic ac., AMP—ampicillin, AZ—aztreonam, SF—sulfonamides, C—cephalosporins, FO—Fosfomycin, IMP—imipenem, Q—quinolones, MER—meropenem, and NF—nitrofurantoin).
Gram-negative uropathogen resistance profiles.
| Antibiotics | Gram-Negative Organisms Isolated | ||||||||||||||
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| R | S | NA | R | S | NA | R | S | NA | R | S | NA | R | S | NA | |
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| Amikacin | 84 (29.68) | 189 (66.78) | 10 (3.53) | 138 (53.07) | 120 (46.15) | 2 (0.76) | 53 (88.33) | 6 (10.0) | 1 (1.66) | 14 (34.14) | 27 (65.85) | - | 289 (44.87) | 342 (53.1) | 13 (2.01) |
| Amoxicillin- | 161 (56.89) | 114 (40.28) | 8 (2.82) | 246 (94.61) | 11 (4.23) | 3 (1.15) | - | - | - | 33 (80.48) | 7 (17.07) | 1 (2.43) | 440 (75.34) | 132 (22.6) | 12 (2.05) |
| Ampicillin | 189 (66.78) | 6 (2.12) | 88 (31.09) | - | - | - | - | - | - | 23 (56.09) | 2 (4.87) | 16 (39.02) | 212 (65.43) | 8 (2.46) | 104 (32.09) |
| Aztreonam | - | - | - | 108 (41.53) | 3 (1.15) | 149 (57.3) | 18 (30.0) | 2 (3.33) | 40 (66.66) | 11 (26.82) | 6 (14.63) | 24 (58.53) | 137 (37.95) | 11 (3.04) | 213 (59.0) |
| Trimethoprim/ | 141 (49.82) | 58 (20.49) | 84 (29.68) | 102 (39.23) | 35 (13.46) | 123 (47.3) | 7 (11.66) | 1 (1.66) | 52 (86.66) | 20 (48.78) | 4 (9.75) | 17 (41.46) | 270 (41.92) | 98 (15.21) | 276 (42.85) |
| Ceftazidime | 170 (60.07) | 101 (35.68) | 12 (4.24) | 245 (94.23) | 14 (5.38) | 1 (0.38) | 54 (90.0) | 6 (10.0) | 0 | 34 (82.92) | 6 (14.63) | 1 (2.43) | 503 (78.10) | 127 (19.72) | 14 (2.17) |
| Fosfomycin | 20 (7.06) | 237 (83.74) | 26 (9.18) | 41 (15.76) | 60 (23.07) | 159 (61.15) | - | - | - | 10 (24.39) | 6 (14.63) | 25 (60.97) | 71 (12.15) | 303 (51.88) | 210 (35.95) |
| Imipenem | 2 (0.7) | 81 (28.62) | 200 (70.67) | 55 (21.15) | 136 (52.3) | 69 (26.53) | 45 (75.0) | 6 (10.0) | 9 (15.0) | 4 (9.75) | 12 (29.26) | 25 (60.97) | 106 (16.45) | 235 (36.49) | 303 (47.04) |
| Levofloxacin | 204 (72.08) | 47 (16.6) | 32 (11.30) | 166 (63.84) | 68 (26.15) | 26 (10.0) | 58 (96.66) | 1 (1.66) | 1 (1.66) | 24 (58.53) | 10 (24.39) | 7 (17.07) | 452 (70.18) | 126 (19.56) | 66 (10.24) |
| Meropenem | 2 (0.7) | 86 (30.38) | 195 (68.90) | 61 (23.46) | 145 (55.76) | 54 (20.76) | 42 (70.0) | 10 (16.66) | 8 (13.33) | 5 (12.19) | 27 (65.85) | 9 (21.95) | 110 (17.08) | 268 (41.61) | 266 (41.3) |
| Nitrofurantoin | 47 (16.6) | 111 (39.22) | 125 (44.16) | 57 (21.92) | 38 (14.61) | 165 (63.46) | 8 (13.33) | 5 (8.33) | 47 (78.33) | - | - | - | 112 (18.57) | 154 (25.53) | 337 (55.88) |
n—number, %—percentage; R—resistant, S—sensitive, and NA—not available.
Most common MDR profiles.
| Antibiotics | |
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| Amoxicillin + Clavulanate, Aztreonam, Cephalosporins, Quinolones | 56 (8.02) |
| Aminoglycosides, Amoxicillin + Clavulanate, Sulfonamides, Cephalosporins | 35 (5.01) |
| Penicillin, Sulfonamides, Quinolones | 34 (4.87) |
| Aminoglycosides, Amoxicillin + Clavulanate, Aztreonam, Cephalosporins, Carbapenems, Quinolones | 28 (4.01) |
| Amoxicillin + Clavulanate, Aztreonam, Cephalosporins, Quinolones, Nitrofurantoin | 21 (3.0) |
| Aminoglycosides, Amoxicillin + Clavulanate, Aztreonam, Cephalosporins, Quinolones | 19 (2.72) |
| Aminoglycosides, Penicillin, Cephalosporins | 17 (2.43) |
| Aminoglycosides, Sulfonamides, Cephalosporins | 14 (2.0) |
| Penicillin, Cephalosporins, Quinolones | 12 (1.71) |
| Aminoglycosides, Cephalosporins, Carbapenems, Quinolones | 11 (1.57) |
n—number and %—percentage.
Figure 3Escherichia coli resistance profiles of MDR strains (Ag—aminoglycosides, Am + C—aminopenicillins + β-lactams inhibitor, Az—aztreonam, C—cephalosporins, P—penicillin, Q—quinolones, and Sf—sulfonamides).
Figure 4Klebsiella spp. resistance profiles of MDR strains (Ag—aminoglycosides, Am + C—aminopenicillins + β-lactams inhibitor, Az—aztreonam, C—cephalosporins, Cb—carbapenems, Nf—nitrofurantoin, Q—quinolones, and Sf—sulfonamides).
Figure 5Diagram of the screened and enrolled patients in the study.