| Literature DB >> 35993167 |
Maeve Hume-Nixon1,2, Ruth Lim2, Fiona Russell1,2, Hamish Graham1,2,3, Claire von Mollendorf1,2, Kim Mulholland1,2,4, Amanda Gwee1,2,3.
Abstract
Background: Streptococcus pneumoniae is one of the most common bacteria causing pneumonia and the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends first-line treatment of pneumonia with penicillins. Due to increases in the frequency of penicillin resistance, this systematic review aimed to determine the clinical outcomes of children with pneumonia in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), with penicillin-group resistant pneumococci in respiratory and/or blood cultures specimens.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35993167 PMCID: PMC9393747 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.12.10004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 7.664
Figure 1PRISMA 2020 Flow Diagram for Systematic Review.
Characteristics and key results of included studies
| Study | Country, region, study period | Study design | Participants | Pre- or post-PCV | Definition of pneumonia used | Method of AMR testing/ definition used | Prevalence of penicillin-group resistant pneumococci in specimens | Treatment received | Clinical outcomes | Key results | EPHPP rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardoso, 2008 [ | Multi-country, Region of the America, 1998-2002 | Prospective observational cohort | 240 children aged 3 to 59 m with CAP of which: | Pre- | As per WHO guidelines | Culture, then BMD/
S≤0.06 mg/L, I 0.12-1 mg/L, R≥2 mg/L*, NCCLS cut-off meningitis | 263 pneumococcal isolates from BC and pleural fluid in 240 children: | IV Pen G 200 000 IU/kg/d or IV ampicillin 150 mg/kg/d | Treatment failure using clinical criteria† | % with treatment failure | Strong |
| • 64 (27%) had PISP | • PSSP 138/263 (52%) | • Penicillin S 25/119 (21%) | |||||||||
| • 120 (50%) had PSSP | • PISP 68/263 (26%) | • Pen I 14/63 (22%) | |||||||||
| • 56 (23%) had PRSP | • PRSP 57/263 (22%): | • Pen R 10/54 (19%) | |||||||||
| MIC 2 mg/L (n = 49) | |||||||||||
|
| MIC 4 mg/L (n = 8) | ||||||||||
| Gomez-Barreto 2000 [ | Mexico/Region of the Americas, 1995-1999 | Prospective observational cohort | 49 children median age 16 m (range 1 m to 11 y) with severe IPD, 21 with pneumonia: | Pre-§ | Pneumonia with signs of lower respiratory tract infection AND bacteremia OR recovery of pathogen from pleural fluid | DD and BMD/NCCLS, NCCLS cut-off meningitis | 49 pneumococcal isolates from all sterile sites: | Either of: IV Pen G 100 000 IU/kg/d; PO amoxicillin 80 mg/k/d;
IV ceftriaxone 100 mg/k/d;
IV cefotaxime 100 mg/k/d ± IV vancomycin 40 mg/k/‖ | Response to therapy | % who improved: | Weak |
| • 6 (29%) had PRSP | • Pen R 25/49 (51%), | • PSSP 9/15 (60%) | |||||||||
| • 15 (71%) had PSSP | IC≥2 mg/L (n = 14) | • PRSP 2/6 (33%) | |||||||||
|
| MIC≥4 mg/L (n = 11) | ||||||||||
| Madhi 2000 [ | South Africa/, Africa, 1997-1998 | Prospective observational cohort | 1215 children with CAP of which: | Pre- | WHO criteria for severe acute LRTI ± oxygen saturation <90% in room air, | BMD/ NCCLSC
NCCLS cut-off meningitis | 58 pneumococcal isolates in BC, susceptibility reported for 50: | Ampicillin or cefuroxime | Mortality | Results reported only for HIV + children PRSP not associated with a higher case fatality rate compared with PSSP: | Mod |
| • 548 were HIV+ (median age 9 y, IQR 4-8) | • PRSP 23/50 (46%) | 2/20 (10%) PRSP vs 4/17 (23.5%) PSSP; | |||||||||
| • 617 were HIV- (median age 8y, IQR 4-14) |
| ||||||||||
| Netsawang 2010 [ | Thailand/South-East Asia Region, 1998-2007 | Retrospective cohort | 106 children median age 1 y (range 26d-13y) with IPD, 12 with pneumonia | Pre- | Not provided | Gradient plate/
CLSI
NCCLS non-meningitis cut-off | 106 pneumococcal isolates from sterile sites of which 75 non-meningitis: | Not stated | Mortality
Length of stay | • PSSP: 9/56 (16%) | Mod |
| • PSSP 56/75 (75%) | • PNSSP: 3/19 (16%) | ||||||||||
| • PRSP 19/75 (25%) | Mean length of stay (days): PSSP 14.3 (SD 16.8) vs PNSSP 11.3 (SD 10.1) ( | ||||||||||
| Ochoa 2010 [ | Peru/Region of the Americas, 2006-2008 | Prospective observational cohort | 101 episodes of IPD in 97 children median age of 1.2 y (range 1 m-15.8 y), 48 with pneumonia | Pre- | Positive
blood or pleural fluid culture AND fever, respiratory distress AND pulmonary infiltrates on chest x-ray. | Optochin susceptibility and E-test/, CLSI/NCCLS, NCCLS non-meningitis cut-off | 101 pneumococcal isolates from sterile sites, of which 62 were non-meningitis: | Not stated | Mortality | No difference proportion of children with PNSSP in fatal vs non-fatal group: 4/20 (20%) fatal vs 15/71 (21%), | Mod |
| PSSP 57/62 (92%) | |||||||||||
| • PISP 1/62 (1%) | |||||||||||
| • PRSP 4/62 (7%) | |||||||||||
| Pancharoen 2001 [ | Thailand/ South-East Asia Region, 1986-1997 | Retrospective cohort | 68 patients including20 children mean age 4 y (range 3 m to 15 y) with pneumonia | Pre- | Not provided | DD and E-test in 8/17 strains/R≥0.12 mg/LNCCLS cut-off meningitis | 19 pneumococcal isolates from sterile sites from children with pneumonia: | Not stated | Mortality | 0/20 with pneumonia | Mod |
| • PSSP 16/19 (84%) | |||||||||||
| • PRSP: 3/19 (16%) | |||||||||||
| Pirez 2001 [ | Uruguay/Regional office for the Americas, 1997-1998 | Prospective nested cohort study | 1163 children aged <1 m to 5 y with CAP | Pre- | For <5 y WHO/PAHO criteria used. Classic clinical and radiologic findings for older children. | E-test/ S≤0.06 mg/L. I≥0.12-1 mg/L, R≥2 mg/L, NCCLS cut-off meningitis | 41 pneumococcal isolates from BC and/or pleural fluid: | Aged 1 m-5 y: IV ampicillin 300mg/kg/d, Aged >5 y: IV pen G 200 000 IU/kg/d | Admission to ICU Mortality Length of stay (% with >14 d in hospital) | PSSP 6/30 (20%) | Weak |
| • PSSP 30/41 (73%) | PISP 0/6 (0%) | ||||||||||
| PRSP 3/5 (60%) | |||||||||||
| PSSP 1/30 (3%) | |||||||||||
|
| PISP 0/6 (0%) | ||||||||||
| • PISP 6/41 (15%) | PRSP 1/5 (20%) | ||||||||||
| PSSP 16/30 (53%) | |||||||||||
| PISP 2/6 (33%) | |||||||||||
|
| PRSP 3/5 (60%) | ||||||||||
| • PRSP: 5/41 (12%) |
BMD – broth micro–dilution, DD – disk diffusion, NCCLSC – National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards criteria, NM – non–meningitis, CLSI – clinical and laboratory standards institute, PSSP – penicillin susceptible streptococcus pneumoniae, PNSP – penicillin non–susceptible streptococcus pneumoniae, PISP – penicillin intermediate susceptible pneumococcus, S – susceptible, I – intermediate, R – resistant, CAP – community–acquired pneumonia, HAP – hospital–acquired pneumonia, BC – blood culture, PF – pleural fluid, IV – intravenous, PO – orally, CFR – case fatality rate, Mod – moderate, d – days, m – months, y – years, IQ – interquartile, ABx – antibiotics, IPD – invasive pneumococcal disease, PAHO – Pan American Health Organization
*CLSI/NCCLS standards.
†Defined as either no improvement (persistence of fever, tachypnoea, dyspnoea or hypoxemia) after at least 48 h of ABx therapy or deterioration of patients during antimicrobial therapy.
‡Calculated using Fisher exact test on STATA 16.1 (StataCorp LLC, Lakeway Drive College Station, TX, USA)
§Mexico introduced PCV7 to NIP in 2006. Reference: Wasserman M, Palacios MG, Grajales AG, Baez/Revueltas FB, Wilson M, McDade C, et al. Modelling the sustained use of the 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine compared to switching to the 10-valent vaccine in Mexico. Human vaccines & immunotherapeutics.
‖8 children received vancomycin, but unsure who of the participants with pneumonia received this.
¶This included both 1/19 isolates that was resistant on oxacillin disc diffusion testing (MIC not performed), and 2/19 that had MIC≥0.12 µg/mL by E-test.