Increasing penicillin resistance in pneumococci isolated from cerebrospinal fluid samples: Fifteen-year experience from a teaching hospital
Journal of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases /
JMID
2014; 4 (4): 136-140
doi: 10.5799/ahinjs.02.2014.04.0156
RESE ARCH ARTICLE
Increasing penicillin resistance in pneumococci isolated from cerebrospinal
fluid samples: Fifteen-year experience from a teaching hospital
Filiz Pehlivanoğlu, Gönül Şengöz, Sevtap Gürsoy
Department of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Haseki Training and Research Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey.
ABSTRACT
Objective: There have been prominent changes in evaluation of resistance patterns of pneumococci and breakpoint
values in recent years. We aimed to investigate the penicillin sensitivity of pneumococcal strains isolated from the cerebrospinal fluid specimens between the years 1997-2011 in our hospital and determine the MIC values under the light
of these changes.
Methods: Identification of pneumococci was made with conventional methods in patients with meningitis. MIC values
for penicillin G were investigated by E test method in all strains. MIC values of pneumococci strains were evaluated according to values determined by CLSI for meningitis isolates in 2008.
Results: A total of 57 strains were investigated in this study. The MIC range for penicillin was 0.016 - 0.75 μg/ml in S.
pneumoniae strains. Seventy five percent of the strains were sensitive and eight strains (14%) had resistance. MIC50
value was sensitive, and a MIC90 value was resistant. The first resistant strain was detected in 2000, and three strains
were resistant in the last year. When examined over the years increased resistance was 5.3% in the first five-year period
seems to be 28.6% in the last five-year period.
Conclusions: Knowledge on penicillin resistance patterns and surveillance is very important in the empirical treatment
in pneumococcal meningitis. J Microbiol Infect Dis 2014; 4(4): 136-140
Key words: S. pneumoniae, penicillin resistance, CSF, breakpoint.
BOS’tan izole edilen pnömokok suşlarında penisilin direncinin artışı: Bir eğitim
hastanesinden 15 yıllık tecrübe
ÖZET
Amaç: Son yıllarda pnömokok bakterilerine direncin değerlendirilmesinde ve eşik değerlerinde büyük değişimler meydana geldi. Bu değişimler ışığında hastanemizde 1997-2011 yıllarında beyin omurilik sıvısı (BOS) örneklerinden izole
edilen pnömokok suşlarında penisilin duyarlılıklarındaki değişimin araştırılması amaçlandı.
Yöntemler: Tümü menenjitli hastalardan izole edilen pnömokokların tanımlamaları konvansiyonel yöntemlerle yapıldı.
Tüm suşlarda penisilin G için MİK değerleri E test yöntemiyle araştırıldı. 2008 yılından itibaren pnömokoklarda penisilin
MİK sınır değerleri, CLSI rehberine göre BOS izolatlarında ≤0,06 μg/ml duyarlı ve ≥0,12 μg/ml dirençli olarak değiştirildi.
Bulgular: Çalışmanın kapsadığı dönemde toplam 57 suş araştırmaya dahil edildi. S. pneumoniae suşlarında, penisilin için
MİK aralığı 0,016-0,75 μg/ml arasında bulundu. Suşların %75’i duyarlı, sekizi (%14) dirençli olarak tespit edildi. MİK50
değeri duyarlı, MİK90 değeri ise dirençli olarak saptandı. İlk dirençli suş 2000 yılında saptanırken son yıl ise suşların üçü
dirençli bulundu. Yıllar içinde direnç artışı irdelendiğinde ilk beş yıllık periyotta %5,3 iken son beş yıllık periyotta %28,6
olduğu görülmektedir.
Sonuç: Pnömokok menenjitlerinde penisilin direncinin bilinmesi ve takip edilmesi ampirik tedavi açısından büyük önem
taşımaktadır.
Anahtar kelimeler: S. pneumoniae, penisilin direnci, BOS, sınır değer.
Correspondence: Filiz Pehlivanoğlu, Department of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Haseki Training and Research
Hospital, İstanbul, Turkey Email:
Received: 15 February 2014, Accepted: 30 November 2014
Copyright © Journal of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases 2014, All rights reserved
Pehlivanoğlu F, et al. Penicillin resistance in pneumococci
INTRODUCTION
Streptococcus pneumoniae which was first described in 1880, is still an important cause of mortality and morbidity globally. Pneumococcal meningitis is a severe form of meningitis with devastating
sequela and frequent recurrences, as well as being
a high-risk disease particularly for patients with diabetes or other diseases that weaken the immune
system, with a mortality that is nearly equal to that
in the pre-antibiotic era.1
Although introduction of penicillin into clinical
practice opened a new epoch in the treatment of
diseases caused by S. pneumoniae, the first resistant isolate was reported in 1967, and other reports
of resistant strains followed this from all around the
world.2 Until 1980, this resistance was both rare and
moderate without clinical failure in penicillin treatment. The epidemics in 1980s with resistant S.
pneumoniae strains and high-levels of resistance
with clinical treatment failures brought this issue into
the light once again. Especially the high levels of resistance detected in some regions of the world have
brought attentions to these severe, life-threatening
infections. Great changes have occurred in resistance patterns of pneumococci and break point values in recent years. MIC values of S. pneumoniae
strains isolated from the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in
the last 15 years were evaluated according to new
criteria in the present study.
METHODS
Penicillin resistance of S. pneumonia was evaluated retrospectively in Haseki Training and Research
Hospital between 1997 and 2011. CSF samples
137
were cultured in blood culture test tubes (BacT Alert
BioMerieux, France) and chocolate agar culture
media and incubated at 37°C in 5% CO2 containing incubator overnight. Identification of the colonies were done according to colony morphology,
Gram staining and optochin sensitivity. Colonies
with lancet-shaped Gram-positive cocci, causing
α-hemolysis at 5% sheep blood agar culture media, sensitive to optochin and dissolving in bile were
considered as S. pneumoniae. MIC values for penicillin were determined with E test (AB Biodisk, Solna, Sweden). These MIC values were re-evaluated
according to new criteria determined by Clinical and
Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) for meningitis
isolates (≤0.06 μg/ml sensitive and ≥0.12 μg/ml resistant) in 2008.3
RESULTS
A total of 57 pneumococci were isolated from CSF
samples in the Microbiology Laboratory. The yearly
distribution of S. pneumoniae isolates are shown
in Figure 1. Two peaks of isolated pneumococci
strains, one in 2000 and the other in 2002 are observed.
MIC range for penicillin was determined as
0.016-0.75 μg/ml (Table 1). Eight strains were resistant to penicillin (14%) and 44 strains (77.1%)
were sensitive (Figure 1). Five strains (8.7%) were
between the ranges for sensitive and resistant. The
first resistant strain was isolated in the year 2000. A
MIC90 value of 0.19 μg/ml was found and a MIC50
value of 0,016 μg/ml was detected in all isolates.
When examined over the years increased resistance was 5.3% in the first five-year period seems
to be 28.6% in the last five-year period (Figure 2).
Figure 1. Yearly distribution of total and resistant
S. pneumoniae strains
iso (...truncated)