Becker's Clinical Quality & Infection Control

July/August 2019 IC_CQ

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28 ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE & STEWARDSHIP Gene that makes salmonella resistant to antibiotics found in US patient By Anuja Vaidya R esearchers have found a gene that makes the salmonella bacteria resistant to last-resort antibiotics in a human patient in the U.S. The research team, from North Carolina State University in Raleigh, identi- fied the gene mcr-3.1, which previously had only been found in people in Asia. The gene gives salmonella resistance to colistin, an antibiotic used as a last resort treatment for multidrug-resistant salmonella infections. Researchers performed genome sequencing on 100 clinical human stool samples taken from the Southeastern U.S. between 2014 and 2016. In one of the samples, they found the colistin-resistant mcr-3.1 gene. The person's whose sample contained the gene had traveled to China two weeks before contracting a salmonella infection. "The positive sample was from 2014, so this discovery definitely has im- plications for the spread of colistin-resistant salmonella in the U.S.," said Siddhartha Thakur, PhD, professor and director of global health at North Carolina State University and corresponding author of the research. The research, supported by the National Institutes of Health/Food and Drug Administration, was published in the Journal of Medical Microbiology. n 1 antibiotic course could create resistance in children, study finds By Anne-Marie Kommers A single course of antibiotics could increase antibiotic resis- tance in children, according to a study published in Clinical Infectious Diseases. To conduct the study, researchers studied families with at least two chil- dren ages 6-59 months in two rural communities in Burkina Faso, a coun- try in West Africa. Researchers randomly assigned 124 children to receive either amoxicillin, azithromycin, cotrimoxazole or a placebo in July 2017. Rectal samples taken five days after a child's last antibiotic treatment found azithromycin made children twice as likely to have genetic re- sistant determinants to macrolide antibiotics, suggesting azithromycin could cause more drastic changes in the gut microbiome than other antibiotics. All antibiotics increased resistance determinants to sulfano- mide antibiotics compared with the placebo. Researchers cautioned that higher numbers of resistance genes do not necessarily create functional resistance, according to Healio. "Whether this eventually translates to infections that are more difficult to treat is unknown," Catherine Oldenburg, PhD, an infectious disease epidemiologist at the UC San Francisco, told the publication. n Patient, physician education can cut inappropriate antibiotics by 32% By Mackenzie Bean E ducating physicians and patients about safe antibiotic practices could cut inappropriate prescriptions by nearly one-third, according to a study published in Academic Emergency Medicine. Researchers from Sacramento, Calif.-based UC Davis Health conducted the CDC-funded study. ey randomly assigned 292 clinicians from nine emergency departments and urgent care centers in California and Colorado to use one of two educational strategies to reduce an- tibiotic use. Researchers then reviewed 44,820 patient visits for viral acute respiratory infec- tions to track the number of inappropriate antibiotics administered to patients between 2017 and 2018. One approach involved giving patients and providers educational materials on safe antibi- otic use, while also designating a physician to champion the efforts. e second approach gave physicians behavioral "nudges," in which they received feedback on prescribing rates and saw how they compared to peers. In total, antibiotic prescriptions for viral infections fell from 6.2 percent to 2.4 percent during the study period. Researchers found inappropriate prescriptions dropped from 2.2 percent to 1.5 percent over the same period, marking a 31.8 percent decrease. e second, more aggressive educational approach involving behavioral nudges was not more effective at reducing antibiotic overuse. "We found education with an on-site champion reduced inappropriate antibiotic use by a third across the board," Larissa May, MD, senior author and professor of emergency medicine at UC Davis Health, said in a news release. "Our study shows that this relatively simple approach can get us to near-zero inappropriate antibiotic use for acute respiratory infections." n

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