Publication | Open Access
Aggregated Antibiograms and Monitoring of Drug-Resistant<i>Streptococcus pneumoniae</i>
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Citations
16
References
2003
Year
Antimicrobial SusceptibilityHealth SciencesAntibioticsAntimicrobial StewardshipMedicineHigh-level Penicillin ResistancePenicillin-nonsusceptible IsolatesMicrobiologyAntimicrobial PharmacokineticsInfection ControlAntibiotic ResistanceBacterial ResistanceActive SurveillanceClinical MicrobiologyAntimicrobial ResistanceEpidemiologyDrug Resistance
Community-specific antimicrobial susceptibility data may help monitor trends among drug-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae and guide empiric therapy. Because active, population-based surveillance for invasive pneumococcal disease is accurate but resource intensive, we compared the proportion of penicillin-nonsusceptible isolates obtained from existing antibiograms, a less expensive system, to that obtained from 1 year of active surveillance for Georgia, Tennessee, California, Minnesota, Oregon, Maryland, Connecticut, and New York. For all sites, proportions of penicillin-nonsusceptible isolates from antibiograms were within 10 percentage points (median 3.65) of those from invasive-only isolates obtained through active surveillance. Only 23% of antibiograms distinguished between isolates intermediate and resistant to penicillin; 63% and 57% included susceptibility results for erythromycin and extended-spectrum cephalosporins, respectively. Aggregating existing hospital antibiograms is a simple and relatively accurate way to estimate local prevalence of penicillin-nonsusceptible pneumococcus; however, antibiograms offer limited data on isolates with intermediate and high-level penicillin resistance and isolates resistant to other agents.
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