Nagaraj Savitha, Kalal Bhuvanesh Sukhlal, Manoharan Anand, Shet Anita
MD, Department of Microbiology, St. John's Medical College Hospital, Bengaluru, 560034, Karnataka, India.
MSc, Department of Biochemistry, Yenepoya Medical College, Yenepoya University, Mangaluru, 575018, Karnataka, India; and Yenepoya Research Centre, Yenepoya University, Mangaluru, 575018, Karnataka, India.
Germs. 2017 Jun 1;7(2):78-85. doi: 10.18683/germs.2017.1112. eCollection 2017 Jun.
We performed a study to describe the clinical profile, antimicrobial susceptibility and prevalent serotypes of pneumococcal isolates from children with suspected invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) admitted to a tertiary care hospital in South India.
Hospitalized children, ≤ 5 years with fever (>38 °C); increased respiratory rate or neurological symptoms were recruited, (as part of the Alliance for Surveillance of Invasive Pneumococci - ASIP - project) from January 2011 to March 2013. Identification of pneumococcal isolates from blood or cerebrospinal fluid samples was done by routine culture methods. Isolates were analyzed for antimicrobial susceptibility, and confirmed by serotyping (using Quellung's test) and multiplex PCR.
Out of the 171 samples received in the lab, 17 grew pneumococci identified by standard methods. Fourteen of them were confirmed by multiplex PCR. Maximum recruitment was observed during the months of January and February (36.4%, 28.6%). The average age of affected subjects was 21 months. The common clinical presentation was pneumonia (42.8%). Two isolates belonging to the 19F and 19B serotypes were resistant to penicillin (on Etest). The observed serotype distribution was 6B and 19F (2 each), and 1, 2, 6A, 9V, 10A, 14, 15A, 19B, 21, 35F (1 each). The overall fatality rate was 14.3% (n=2); the isolates from these two patients belonged to the non-vaccine serotype 19B and vaccine serotype 19F and demonstrated resistance to penicillin and erythromycin.
Our study demonstrates the presence of invasive pneumococcal disease among under-5-year-old children in India caused by serotypes that are in large part covered by available pneumococcal vaccines.
我们开展了一项研究,以描述印度南部一家三级护理医院收治的疑似侵袭性肺炎球菌病(IPD)儿童的肺炎球菌分离株的临床特征、抗菌药物敏感性及流行血清型。
2011年1月至2013年3月,招募了≤5岁、发热(>38°C)、呼吸频率增加或有神经系统症状的住院儿童(作为侵袭性肺炎球菌监测联盟 - ASIP - 项目的一部分)。通过常规培养方法从血液或脑脊液样本中鉴定肺炎球菌分离株。对分离株进行抗菌药物敏感性分析,并通过血清分型(使用荚膜肿胀试验)和多重PCR进行确认。
实验室收到的171份样本中,17份培养出肺炎球菌,经标准方法鉴定。其中14份经多重PCR确认。1月和2月招募人数最多(分别为36.4%、28.6%)。受影响受试者的平均年龄为21个月。常见临床表现为肺炎(42.8%)。两株属于19F和19B血清型的分离株对青霉素耐药(Etest法)。观察到的血清型分布为6B和19F(各2株),以及1、2、6A、9V、10A、14、15A、19B、21、35F(各1株)。总死亡率为14.3%(n = 2);这两名患者的分离株属于非疫苗血清型19B和疫苗血清型19F,且对青霉素和红霉素耐药。
我们的研究表明,在印度5岁以下儿童中存在侵袭性肺炎球菌病,其血清型在很大程度上可被现有的肺炎球菌疫苗覆盖。