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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, June 2000, p. 1650-1654, Vol. 44, No. 6
0066-4804/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Increasing Bacterial Resistance in Pediatric Acute
Conjunctivitis (1997-1998)
Stan L.
Block,1,*
James
Hedrick,1
Ron
Tyler,1
Alan
Smith,1
Rebecca
Findlay,1
Eileen
Keegan,1 and
Dave W.
Stroman2
Kentucky Pediatric Research, Inc., Bardstown,
Kentucky,1 and Alcon Research, Ltd., Ft.
Worth, Texas2
Received 6 October 1999/Returned for modification 24 January
2000/Accepted 27 March 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
We sought to determine the current level of resistance in
Haemophilus influenzae and Streptococcus
pneumoniae, the primary pathogens of pediatric conjunctivitis.
Between January 1997 and March 1998, we prospectively cultured acute
conjunctivitis in 250 ambulatory pediatric patients from rural Kentucky
whose average age was 24.3 months. In those 250 cases, 106 H. influenzae (42% of the total) and 75 S. pneumoniae
(30% of the total) pathogens were isolated, with no growth or no
pathogen resulting in 79 cases (32% of the total). Beta-lactamase was
detected in 60 (69%) of 87 tested strains of H. influenzae. Among 65 isolates of S. pneumoniae tested
for penicillin susceptibility, 44 (68%) were susceptible, 17 (26%)
were resistant, and 4 (6%) were intermediate. Conjunctivitis with
acute otitis media was observed in 97 patients (39%), and H. influenzae was recovered in 57% of these 97 cases. As for in vitro activity, ciprofloxacin, ofloxacin, and tetracycline were the
most active; and gentamicin, tobramycin, polymyxin B-trimethoprim, and
polymyxin B-neomycin were intermediately active. Sulfamethoxazole possessed no activity against either pathogen. Beta-lactamase production was detected in 69% of H. influenzae strains,
which still remains the primary causative pathogen of both
conjunctivitis and conjunctivitis-otitis syndrome.
Penicillin-nonsusceptible S. pneumoniae was observed in
32% of 65 patients with S. pneumoniae conjunctivitis, with
most strains being penicillin resistant.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Acute conjunctivitis is the most
common ocular infection in childhood, usually affecting children
younger than 6 years old with a peak incidence between 12 and 36 months
(3). Pediatric acute conjunctivitis is diagnosed by clinical
signs of ocular purulent discharge or hyperemia of bulbar conjunctiva.
The etiology of this infection has been documented as bacterial in 54 to 73% of pediatric cases (3, 20). The pathogens
predominantly recovered include nontypeable Haemophilus
influenzae (44 to 68% of cases) and Streptococcus
pneumoniae (7 to 21% of cases). Concomitant infection with acute
otitis media (AOM) has been coined the conjunctivitis-otitis syndrome
by Bodor (4) and is associated with H. influenzae in 20 to 73% of cases and with S. pneumoniae in 12 to 20%
of cases (4, 10). Other rare bacterial pathogens of
conjunctivitis include Moraxella catarrhalis,
Streptococcus mitis, and Streptococcus pyogenes
(10, 22).
Clinicians nearly always empirically treat acute conjunctivitis with
topical antimicrobial therapy. The disease is mild, cultures are rarely
obtained because of expense, and culture results are reported days
later (13). Compared with placebo, topical therapy with
polymyxin-bacitracin ointment has been shown to reduce by half the
duration of symptoms and to achieve a 2.5-fold increase in rate of
bacteriologic eradication at days 8 to 10 (31 versus 79%,
respectively) (6). Furthermore, selecting among the
multitude of available topical antimicrobials to treat conjunctivitis
has been based on either sparse in vitro data or on earlier limited clinical efficacy trials, mostly from the 1970s and 1980s. In addition,
only a single national surveillance study from multiple sites of
infection in both children and adults during the 1990s has described
the frequency of penicillin-nonsusceptible S. pneumoniae (PNSP) in conjunctivitis, but only among S. pneumoniae
isolates (5).
We recently reported substantial changes in antimicrobial resistance
among the two most commonly isolated pathogens of AOM (1),
S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae, which are also
the predominant pathogens of conjunctivitis (4). In
pediatric patients with acute conjunctivitis, we attempted to document
the current incidence of PNSP, proportion of beta-lactamase-producing
strains among isolates of H. influenzae, and susceptibility
patterns of these particular organisms to the commonly used topical
antibacterials available for treatment of conjunctivitis.
(This work was presented at the 38th Interscience Conference on
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, San Diego, Calif., 24 to 27 September, 1998.)
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Patient population.
During a 15-month interval between
January 1997 and March 1998, as part of our routine care, we
sequentially cultured a convenience sample of previously healthy
patients with acute conjunctivitis at the physicians' discretion,
primarily culturing those patients with obvious purulent discharge.
Acute conjunctivitis was diagnosed by signs of conjunctival
inflammation (bulbar conjunctival hyperemia or purulent discharge) of
less than 14 days duration without signs of preseptal cellulitis.
Patients were also assessed for signs of AOM and rhinorrhea. AOM was
diagnosed by the presence of any one of the following tympanic membrane
findings: marked hyperemia; fullness or bulging; purulent effusion or
air-fluid levels; and discoloration with yellow, white (not scarred),
or green opacification. Five of six general pediatricians in private
practice in rural central Kentucky were previously validated
otoscopists. Patient charts were also analyzed for the gender, race,
and age of each patient; presence of rhinorrhea; and month of diagnosis.
Culture methods.
The inferior conjunctival sac was swabbed
in a single sweep for secretions or discharge with a Dacron swab, which
was then streaked over chocolate and 5% sheep blood agar plates.
Optochin and oxacillin disks were placed onto sheep blood agar plates, which were incubated overnight in a candle extinction jar at 35°C. Culture plates were examined the next morning. Small, mucoid CFU growing exclusively on chocolate agar, but not on sheep blood agar,
were presumptively identified as Haemophilus strains
(4). Predominant CFU growing on sheep blood agar plates,
displaying characteristic morphology of pitting and alpha-hemolysis,
and showing inhibition to optochin disk (zone size, >20 mm) on sheep blood agar were presumptively identified as S. pneumoniae.
Nonsusceptibility to penicillin of these same presumptive S. pneumoniae colonies was assumed if the zone of inhibition around
the oxacillin disk was less than 20 mm. All isolates were frozen and
stored at
70°C and were later shipped to the research laboratory at
Alcon Research, Ltd.
Confirmation and susceptibility testing.
Diagnostic
biochemical reactions for species confirmation were performed on viable
isolates by using bioMerieux's VITEK 32 system (McDonell Douglas
Health Care Systems). For H. influenzae and S. pneumoniae isolates, Neisseria/Haemophilus Identification (NHI)
test cards and gram-positive identification (GPI) test cards, respectively, were used. Capsular serotyping of H. influenzae isolates was determined by DIFCO H. influenzae antiserum, and beta-lactamase production was
ascertained by VITEK NHI test cards. Susceptibility testing using
protocols from the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards
(when possible) was performed by broth microdilution on Mueller-Hinton
broth with 5% lysed horse blood for S. pneumoniae and on
Haemophilus test medium broth for H. influenzae
(14).
Both organisms were tested for susceptibility to the following
antibiotics: tobramycin, gentamicin, neomycin, polymyxin B, trimethoprim, polymyxin B-trimethoprim (1.0 µg per ml/0.8 µg per ml), polymyxin B-neomycin (1.0 µg per ml/3.2 µg per ml),
ciprofloxacin, ofloxacin, tetracycline, erythromycin, chloramphenicol,
and sulfamethoxazole. S. pneumoniae was further tested
against penicillin, clindamycin, and cefazolin, and H. influenzae was tested against ampicillin. Penicillin
susceptibility for S. pneumoniae was categorized as follows:
susceptible, penicillin MIC of <0.1 µg/ml; intermediate penicillin
resistant, penicillin MIC of 0.1 to 1.0 µg/ml; and penicillin
resistant, penicillin MIC of
2.0 µg/ml.
Statistical analysis.
Statistical analysis was performed by
using the Sigmastat computer package. Chi-square for trend was used
with significance set at P < 0.05.
 |
RESULTS |
The average age of the 250 children with acute conjunctivitis was
24.3 months, ranging from 2 weeks to 192 months (Table
1). The majority of children were younger
than 24 months, 95% were white, and within each age group the rate of
pathogen recovery was not significantly different. We estimated from
our office charges that 830 office visits for acute conjunctivitis
occurred during this interval.
H. influenzae was the pathogen most frequently recovered
from cases of acute conjunctivitis, accounting for 106 isolates (42%) in 250 children. Beta-lactamase production was detected in 60 (69%) of
87 confirmed H. influenzae strains, and all strains were nontypeable. S. pneumoniae accounted for 75 (30%) isolates
initially identified on blood agar plates, with 21 (28%) of 75 strains
resistant by oxacillin disc testing. Penicillin susceptibility testing
by broth microdilution of 65 viable strains showed that 17 (26%) were
resistant, 4 (7%) were intermediately resistant, and 44 (68%) were
susceptible. The penicillin MIC for three S. pneumoniae
isolates was 8 µg/ml. Ten (4%) of 250 children had both pathogens
recovered simultaneously. Nineteen and 11 isolates of H. influenzae and S. pneumoniae, respectively, initially
identified were lost in the freezing and shipping process. No growth or
nonpathogenic isolates were obtained in 79 (32%) of patients.
Conjunctivitis-AOM was observed in 97 (39%) of all patients. H. influenzae, penicillin-susceptible S. pneumoniae, and
PNSP accounted for 57, 18, and 8%, respectively, of all cases of
conjunctivitis. Within each respective group of patients, H. influenzae (55 [52%] of 106) was associated more frequently
with AOM than either S. pneumoniae (24 [32%] of 75) or no
growth (18 [23%] of 79) (P < 0.01). When patients
were stratified by age 6 to 36 months (the group most likely to be
affected by AOM), the rate of recovery for each pathogen in these 69 children was not significantly different than that of the overall
group. Only 13% of patients were older than 48 months, and one-half of
them still had a bacterial pathogen. Among the 35 infants younger than
2 months, H. influenzae comprised 33%,
penicillin-susceptible S. pneumoniae comprised 11%, and
PNSP comprised 3% of pathogens. No pathogen (3) and
H. influenzae (1) were recovered in four
1-week-old infants, whereas H. influenzae (5),
S. pneumoniae (2), and no pathogen (4)
were recovered in 11 2-week-old infants.
Purulent discharge or erythema of the conjunctiva(e) was observed in 86 and 53%, respectively, of patients with conjunctivitis. Rhinorrhea was
more commonly observed among patients whose condition had a bacterial
cause (H. influenzae [55%] and S. pneumoniae
[49%]), than in those without a pathogen (35%) (nonsignificant).
Figure 1 shows that minimal seasonal
variation was observed among patients with S. pneumoniae
isolates, whereas H. influenzae was more frequently isolated
between December 1997 and February 1998 (P < 0.02).

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FIG. 1.
Seasonal incidence of pediatric conjunctival pathogens
(1997-1998) (n = 250 patients). The bars show H. influenzae (hatched), S. pneumoniae (striped), and no
pathogen or no growth (stippled). Ten patients had both pathogens
recovered: December to February (two), March to May (two), June to
August (three), and September to November (three).
|
|
Tables 2 and
3 show the results of susceptibility
testing for S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae,
respectively. The most- to least-active antibiotics of those possessing
at least minimal activity (MIC at which 90% of the isolates tested are
inhibited [MIC90], <32 µg/ml) against both H. influenzae and all levels of penicillin susceptibility for
S. pneumoniae organisms are as follows: most active,
ciprofloxacin and ofloxacin; intermediately active, tetracycline,
chloramphenicol, erythromycin, gentamicin, and tobramycin. The majority
of strains of penicillin-susceptible S. pneumoniae and PNSP
were resistant to polymyxin B, neomycin, or combination polymyxin
B-neomycin. Only sulfamethoxazole possessed virtually no activity
against either organism. Beta-lactamase production among strains of
H. influenzae had no effect on antimicrobial susceptibility
to the available topical antimicrobials.
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TABLE 2.
In vitro antimicrobial susceptibilities for S. pneumoniae isolates obtained from pediatric patients with
acute conjunctivitis (1997-1998)
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TABLE 3.
In vitro antimicrobial susceptibilities for H. influenzae isolates obtained from pediatric patients with
acute conjunctivitis (1997-1998)
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
H. influenzae or S. pneumoniae was recovered
from nearly three-fourths of children with acute conjunctivitis.
H. influenzae continues to be the most prevalent pathogen
identified, also accounting for the majority of identified bacteria in
patients with conjunctivitis-AOM syndrome. The rate of
beta-lactamase-producing H. influenzae isolated from
children with acute conjunctivitis has increased from 16% in the
nasopharynx during the mid-1980s (10), compared with rates
from conjunctivitis of 44% in the late 1980s (3), to our
current rate of 69%. In contrast to previous reports (18), we recovered H. influenzae more frequently during the winter
months. Although PNSP was isolated from only 8% of patients with
conjunctivitis, it accounted for approximately one-third of recovered
S. pneumoniae pathogens, a proportion similar to that of
pathogens recovered from children with pneumococcal AOM in our
community from 1992 to 1994 (2). The rate of PNSP among
S. pneumoniae isolates in our study was threefold higher
than that of the only other series (1994 to 1995) to report a rate of
PNSP in conjunctival isolates (5).
Our susceptibility data shows diminished activity for gentamicin,
tobramycin, polymyxin B-neomycin, polymyxin B-trimethoprim, and
sulfamethoxazole against one or both of the most common causative pathogens of pediatric conjunctivitis. In fact, our sulfamethoxazole data would predict that the inexpensive sulfonamide class of
antimicrobials currently in common use may have become no more
effective than placebo. Topical sulfonamides should be used with
caution until new clinical trials demonstrate their efficacy. In
addition, sulfonamides and neomycin are commonly associated with
hypersensitivity reactions, and sulfonamides are extremely irritating
to the conjunctiva (13, 23). For H. influenzae,
the two aminoglycosides tobramycin and gentamicin were more active than
the neomycin combination but not as active as polymyxin-trimethoprim.
Clinicians should suspect PNSP as the causative pathogen when children
fail to respond to initial therapy with the combination topical
antibiotics. The two topical fluoroquinolones possessed the highest
intrinsic activity against all conjunctival pathogens, particularly for
strains of PNSP. Both fluoroquinolones are approved by the Food and
Drug Administration for the treatment of acute conjunctivitis in
children older than 12 months. Tetracycline was notably active against most strains of bacteria, but concerns about dental staining in children younger than 8 years preclude its routine use in pediatric populations. In light of rapidly evolving resistant pathogens, in vitro
susceptibility patterns may be the only practical means of evaluating
the potential efficacy of the multitude of topical antimicrobials, of
which most lack any current in vitro or in vivo clinical data. Most
practitioners treat acute conjunctivitis in children with topical
ophthalmological antimicrobials because (i) organisms are more rapidly
eradicated with subsequent probable reduction in contagiousness and
(ii) symptoms resolve quicker (13).
Neither breakpoints for susceptibility to topical antibiotics nor the
appropriate formulation of combination antibiotics for in vitro testing
have been determined. Thus, evaluating antibiotic pharmacokinetics-by
comparing concentrations in tears with current MIC90s
may
better enable clinicians to predict efficacy for some topical
antibiotics, similar to our assumptions about antibiotics for other
illnesses, such as bacteremia and AOM. Despite the high concentration
that topical antibiotics initially deliver to the conjunctiva, with
continuous normal blinking and lacrimation, concentrations in adult
tears fall below reported tobramycin, gentamicin, and ofloxacin
MIC90s for H. influenzae after 10, 120, and 240 min, respectively (15, 16). In contrast, after 240 min,
ciprofloxacin tear concentrations (16.0 µg/ml) remain well above the
MIC90 values for H. influenzae and S. pneumoniae (12). Yet, these kinetics may markedly
overestimate the concentrations in tears of younger children who cry
frequently when ill or upset or during the instillation of topical
agents. Topical ointments probably deliver more-sustained
concentrations of antibiotic to the conjunctiva, a fact that is
possibly important in light of our tetracycline data. Unfortunately, in
children older than 9 months, ointments are poorly tolerated because
they blur the vision, and applying a layer of ointment with a
metal-tipped tube to an ordinarily uncooperative, squirming youngster
can be hazardous and is difficult for most parents. Alternatively,
preliminary data suggests that a short course of beta-lactam oral
antimicrobials may possibly eradicate the conjunctival infection
(18).
Our data may have two important implications for the management of AOM.
First, they confirm previous reports (3, 4) that when
practitioners encounter children with conjunctivitis-AOM syndrome, they
should more than ever select oral antimicrobials that possess
good in vitro coverage for beta-lactamase-producing H. influenzae. Strains of H. influenzae recovered from
acute conjunctivitis have been shown to be identical to those in AOM
(4). Second, our susceptibility data for sulfamethoxazole
further bolster recommendations (17) to avoid antibiotic
chemoprophylaxis, particularly with sulfonamide drugs, for recurrent
AOM. Our MIC50 and MIC90 (32 to >256 µg/ml)
for sulfamethoxazole clearly showed that the two predominant pathogens
of conjunctivitis, and subsequently AOM, are currently markedly
resistant to the sulfonamides, all of which possess the same mechanism
of action.
An aerobic bacterial pathogen was recovered in over half of newborns
from 2 weeks to 2 months of age, a rate similar to that reported by
Krohn and et al. (11). We did not test for Chlamydia trachomatis, a pathogen not prevented by the usual topical
antimicrobials for neonatal prophylaxis (8). However, in the
United States, C. trachomatis primarily causes
conjunctivitis in children younger than 2 to 2 1/2 weeks (9,
19). Furthermore, in a multicenter study of children younger than
2 months old in the United States (11), C. trachomatis infection accounted for merely 2% of overall conjunctivitis, whereas infection with aerobic bacteria accounted for
44% of cases, the latter finding supported by our data. Thus, it would
appear that initial empiric therapy for infants older than 2 weeks in
lower-risk populations should probably target common aerobic pathogens
(19). If no improvement is observed posttherapy or if
conjunctivitis recurs within a week in children younger than 2 months,
clinicians should consider culturing for aerobic pathogens, testing for
C. trachomatis, and possibly empirically prescribing both
topical and oral erythromycin.
Our study design had the following shortcomings. (i) The lack of formal
selection criteria or randomization could have biased the seasonal
pattern, rates of conjunctivitis-otitis syndrome, and epidemiologic and
age differences. However, we doubt that this had much effect on the
overall microbiology observed (no clinical correlates distinguish
between H. influenzae and S. pneumoniae conjunctivitis), the rate of H. influenzae recovered in
patients with conjunctivitis-otitis, or the respective bacterial
susceptibility patterns. Conjunctivitis also has distinct age and
seasonal patterns similar to those of AOM. Patients with AOM are
likewise cultured based on the severity of illness and at the
physician's discretion as a convenience sample. In addition, our rate
of conjunctivitis-otitis syndrome is similar to data from our previous
clinical trial (10) and the work of others. (21)
(ii) M. catarrhalis was excluded as a pathogen because of
the lack of a reliable screen on the initial agar plates, its low
reported incidence (1 to 6%) (3), and its high propensity
to spontaneously resolve. However, we did not observe any S. pyogenes, unlike during our earlier work (10). (iii)
The correlation between in vitro resistance and efficacy is unknown,
particularly in a self-limited disease such as conjunctivitis, but
duration of symptoms and potential for infectivity is reduced with
more-active antibiotics.
Our data show that the bacterial pathogens H. influenzae and
S. pneumoniae continue to be the major pathogens recovered
from children who were diagnosed with acute conjunctivitis in the 1990s (7). S. pneumoniae organisms resistant to high
levels of penicillin are now present in one-fourth of the cases of
pneumococcal conjunctivitis and over two-thirds of isolated H. influenzae strains produce beta-lactamase. When clinicians select
initial antibiotic therapy for children with acute conjunctivitis,
topical antibiotics such as the polymyxin combinations or other
antibiotics more active against H. influenzae would be
reasonable. Sulfonamides are probably no longer an appropriate choice.
Earlier in vivo comparative clinical trials for pediatric
conjunctivitis have shown that gentamicin or sodium sulfacetamide was
not as effective as polymyxin-trimethoprim against H. influenzae (13). In contrast, tobramycin was as
effective as the more-active ciprofloxacin, but PNSP was not reported
(7). If first-line topical therapy for acute conjunctivitis
in children older than 2 months fails, clinicians should then consider
obtaining a standard aerobic culture of the conjunctiva and initiating
therapy with a topical fluoroquinolone (off-label usage between 2 and 12 months of age) to cover for both PNSP and H. influenzae. Beta-lactamase stable oral antibiotics against
H. influenzae, such as third-generation cephalosporins or
amoxicillin-clavulanate, should be added for the treatment of
conjunctivitis-otitis syndrome (1).
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We sincerely appreciate the excellent assistance in completing
this project provided by Marti Spalding. Gale Cupp, Linda Clark, Metilda McDonald, and Celeste McLean superbly performed laboratory susceptibility testing and pathogen identification. We are also deeply
indebted to C. J. Harrison for his review of the manuscript and
the statistical analysis.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Kentucky
Pediatric Research, Inc., 201 South 5th Street, Bardstown, KY 40004. Phone: (502) 348-5860. Fax: (502) 348-2793. E-mail:
SLBlock{at}pol.net.
 |
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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, June 2000, p. 1650-1654, Vol. 44, No. 6
0066-4804/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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