4 research outputs found

    Increase of beta-Lactam-Resistant Invasive Haemophilus influenzae in Sweden, 1997 to 2010

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    The proportions of Haemophilus influenzae resistant to ampicillin and other beta-lactam antibiotics have been low in Sweden compared to other countries in the Western world. However, a near-doubled proportion of nasopharyngeal Swedish H. influenzae isolates with resistance to beta-lactams has been observed in the last decade. In the present study, the epidemiology and mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance of H. influenzae isolates from blood and cerebrospinal fluid in southern Sweden from 1997 to 2010 (n = 465) were studied. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing was performed using disk diffusion, and isolates with resistance to any tested beta-lactam were further analyzed in detail. We identified a significantly increased (P = 0.03) proportion of beta-lactam-resistant invasive H. influenzae during the study period, which was mainly attributed to a significant recent increase of beta-lactamase-negative beta-lactam-resistant isolates (P = 0.04). Furthermore, invasive beta-lactamase-negative beta-lactam-resistant H. influenzae isolates from 2007 and onwards were found in higher proportions than the corresponding proportions of nasopharyngeal isolates in a national survey. Multiple-locus sequence typing (MIST) of this group of isolates did not completely separate isolates with different resistance phenotypes. However, one cluster of beta-lactamase-negative ampicillin-resistant (BLNAR) isolates was identified, and it included isolates from all geographical areas. A truncated variant of a beta-lactamase gene with a promoter deletion, bla(TEM-1)-P Delta dominated among the beta-lactamase-positive H. influenzae isolates. Our results show that the proportions of beta-lactam-resistant invasive H. influenzae have increased in Sweden in the last decade

    Binding of complement regulators to invasive nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae is not increased compared to nasopharyngeal isolates, but serum resistance is linked to disease severity.

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    The aim of the present study was to analyse the importance for non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) isolated from patients with sepsis (invasive isolates) compared to nasopharyngeal isolates from patients with upper respiratory tract infection to resist the complement-mediated attack in human serum and to correlate this to disease severity. We in detail studied and characterized cases of invasive NTHi disease. All patients with invasive NTHi isolates were adults and 35 % had a clinical presentation of severe sepsis according to the ACCP/SCCM classification of sepsis grading. Moreover, 41 % of the cases had evidence of immune deficiency. The different isolates were analyzed for survival in human serum, for binding of [(125)I]-labeled purified human complement inhibitors C4b-binding protein (C4BP), Factor H and vitronectin in addition to binding of regulators directly from serum. No significant differences were found when blood and nasopharyngeal isolates were compared, suggesting that interactions with the complement system are equally important for NTHi strains irrespectively of isolation site. Interestingly, a correlation between serum resistance and invasive disease severity was found. The ability to resist the attack of the complement system seems to be important for NTHi strains infecting the respiratory tract as well as the blood stream
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