Division of Bacterial Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Clin Infect Dis. 2011 Oct;53(7):631-9. doi: 10.1093/cid/cir443.
Streptococcus pneumoniae infections have become increasingly complicated and costly to treat with the spread of antibiotic resistance. We evaluated the relationship between antibiotic prescribing and nonsusceptibility among invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) isolates.
Outpatient antibiotic prescription data for penicillins, cephalosporins, macrolides, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole were abstracted from the IMS Health Xponent database to calculate the annual number of prescriptions per capita. We analyzed IPD data from 7 of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Active Bacterial Core surveillance sites (population, 18.6 million) for which data were available for the entire time period under study (1996-2003). Logistic regression models were used to assess whether sites with high antibiotic prescribing rates had a high proportion of nonsusceptible and serotype 19A IPD.
Yearly prescribing rates during the period 1996-2003 for children <5 years of age decreased by 37%, from 4.23 to 2.68 prescriptions per capita per year (P < .001), and those for persons ≥5 years of age decreased by 42%, from 0.98 to 0.57 prescriptions per capita per year (P < .001); increases in azithromycin prescribing were noted for both groups. Sites with high rates of antibiotic prescribing had a higher proportion of IPD nonsusceptibility than did low-prescribing sites (P = .003 for penicillin, P < .001 for every other antibiotic class). Cephalosporin and macrolide prescribing were associated with penicillin and multidrug nonsusceptibility and serotype 19A IPD (P < .001).
In sites where antibiotic prescribing is high, the proportion of nonsusceptible IPD is also high, suggesting that local prescribing practices contribute to local resistance patterns. Cephalosporins and macrolides seem to be selecting for penicillin- and multidrug-resistant pneumococci, as well as serotype 19A IPD. Antibiotic use is a major factor contributing to the spread of antibiotic resistance; strategies to reduce antibiotic resistance should continue to include judicious use of antibiotics.
随着抗生素耐药性的传播,肺炎链球菌感染的治疗变得越来越复杂和昂贵。我们评估了抗生素使用与侵袭性肺炎球菌病(IPD)分离株的非敏感性之间的关系。
从 IMS Health Xponent 数据库中提取了青霉素、头孢菌素、大环内酯类和磺胺甲噁唑-甲氧苄啶的门诊抗生素处方数据,以计算人均年处方数。我们分析了疾病控制与预防中心的 7 个主动细菌核心监测点(人口 1860 万)的 IPD 数据,这些数据在整个研究期间(1996-2003 年)都可用。使用逻辑回归模型评估抗生素使用率高的地区是否具有较高比例的非敏感性和 19A 血清型 IPD。
1996-2003 年期间,5 岁以下儿童的年处方率下降了 37%,从 4.23 降至 2.68 人/年(P<0.001),5 岁以上人群的处方率下降了 42%,从 0.98 降至 0.57 人/年(P<0.001);两组人群的阿奇霉素处方量均有所增加。抗生素使用率高的地区的 IPD 非敏感性比例高于低使用率地区(青霉素 P=0.003,其他抗生素类别 P<0.001)。头孢菌素和大环内酯类药物的使用与青霉素和多药耐药性以及 19A 血清型 IPD 相关(P<0.001)。
在抗生素使用率较高的地区,非敏感性 IPD 的比例也较高,这表明当地的处方实践导致了当地的耐药模式。头孢菌素和大环内酯类药物似乎选择了青霉素和多药耐药性肺炎球菌以及 19A 血清型 IPD。抗生素的使用是抗生素耐药性传播的主要因素;减少抗生素耐药性的策略应继续包括合理使用抗生素。