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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, January 2006, p. 49-54, Vol. 50, No. 1
0066-4804/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.50.1.49-54.2006
Foodborne and Diarrheal Diseases Branch, Division of Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases,1 Epidemic Intelligence Service, Division of Applied Public Health Training, Epidemiology Program Office,2 Biostatistics and Information Branch, Division of Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia3
Received 1 August 2005/ Returned for modification 7 September 2005/ Accepted 30 October 2005
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Antimicrobial resistance has complicated the selection of empirical agents for treatment of shigellosis, particularly in children. When the prevalence of resistance to ampicillin among Shigella isolates increased in the 1970s, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) became the alternative (31). In 1986, national laboratory-based surveillance for antimicrobial susceptibility of Shigella isolates revealed that 32% were resistant to ampicillin and 7% were resistant to TMP-SMX (46). In 1995, laboratory-based surveillance demonstrated resistance to ampicillin in 67% and resistance to TMP-SMX in 35% of Shigella isolates (15). More recent data from Oregon revealed high rates of TMP-SMX (63%), ampicillin (59%), and multidrug (13%) resistance among Shigella isolates from this state (35).
National surveillance for antimicrobial resistance among Shigella isolates began in 1999 as part of the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS) for Enteric Bacteria (10). To describe trends in antimicrobial resistance among Shigella isolates from 1999 through 2002, we analyzed NARMS data for the first 4 years of surveillance. Our findings indicate an increase in the rates of resistance of Shigella isolates to ampicillin and TMP-SMX and evidence of emerging resistance to nalidixic acid.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Shigella isolates were tested at the CDC with a semiautomated system (Sensititre; Trek Diagnostics, Westlake, OH) to determine the MIC ranges of 15 antimicrobial agents: amikacin, ampicillin, amoxicillin-clavulanic acid, ceftiofur, ceftriaxone, cephalothin, chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, gentamicin, kanamycin, nalidixic acid, streptomycin, sulfamethoxazole, tetracycline, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. Ceftiofur is the only expanded-spectrum cephalosporin approved for systemic use in food animals in the United States and is included in NARMS because the use of this antimicrobial in food animals has been implicated as a factor responsible for the emergence of ceftriaxone-resistant enteric pathogens, such as Salmonella (16). This has not been documented for Shigella. MIC results were dichotomized (isolates with intermediate susceptibility were categorized as sensitive), and CLSI (formerly NCCLS) criteria were used when applicable (14). Ceftiofur resistance was defined as a MIC of
8 µg/ml based on population distributions of MICs for gram-negative isolates. Decreased susceptibility to ciprofloxacin was defined as a MIC of
0.125 µg/ml.
Statistical analysis. Statistical analysis focused on the relationships between antimicrobial resistance patterns and Shigella serotype, geographic location, and age and sex of the patient. We defined a pansensitive isolate as one that was sensitive to all antimicrobial agents included in the analysis. We defined multidrug resistance as resistance to two or more classes of antimicrobial agents (tested separately) among all classes included in the analysis. To calculate incidence rates by geographic region, we grouped participating sites into four regions: West (Los Angeles County, Oregon, and Washington), Midwest (Colorado, Kansas, and Minnesota), South (Florida, Georgia, Maryland, Tennessee, and West Virginia), and Northeast (Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, and New Jersey). Region-specific rates of isolation per 100,000 population were determined for the study period with 2000 census data from the U.S. Bureau of the Census (48).
We compared the number of Shigella isolates submitted to NARMS from 1999 to 2002 to the number of laboratory-confirmed Shigella infections reported to the CDC via the Public Health Laboratory Information System (PHLIS) (11). Unlike the NARMS surveillance system, PHLIS is used by public health laboratory directors and state and territorial epidemiologists from every state in the United States to report all laboratory-confirmed Shigella isolates. Therefore, the comparison with PHLIS provides information about the generalizability of the data gathered through NARMS. In addition, we compared the proportion of Shigella isolates resistant to TMP-SMX and ampicillin found in our study to two previous national laboratory-based surveillance studies to examine trends in resistance to these agents (15, 46).
Statistical analyses were conducted using SAS version 8 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC) statistical software. We used
2 tests to compare proportions and Fisher's exact test when appropriate. Continuous variables were compared by the Wilcoxon rank-sum test. P values are based on two-tailed test results, and P values of <0.05 were considered statistically significant.
| RESULTS |
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Geographic distribution. During the 4-year study period, the number of Shigella isolates received per 100,000 population was 1.75 in the Northeast, 1.51 in the South, 2.30 in the Midwest, and 1.10 in the West. S. sonnei accounted for 76% of all Shigella isolates from the Northeast, 89% from the South, 87% from the Midwest, and 62% from the West. S. flexneri accounted for 22% of all Shigella isolates from the Northeast, 10% from the South, 12% from the Midwest, and 35% from the West. S. boydii accounted for 1% of isolates from the Northeast, 1% from the South, 0.7% from the Midwest, and 2% from the West. S. dysenteriae accounted for 1% of isolates from the Northeast and 0% from the South, Midwest, and West.
Age and gender. Information on patient age was available for 1,442 (90%) of 1,598 isolates identified to species level that were received during the study period. The median age was 8 years (range, <1 year to 99 years), and 51% were male. Infants and children from 1 to 4 years of age accounted for the highest proportion of S. sonnei (32%) and S. flexneri (29%) isolates submitted to NARMS. In the PHLIS data reported in 2002, infants and children aged 1 to 4 years accounted for a similarly high proportion of infections with S. sonnei (33%) and S. flexneri (26%) (11). Consistent with PHLIS data, persons from whom S. sonnei isolates were submitted to NARMS were younger than those with S. flexneri (median age, 8 years versus 12 years; P = 0.03). Overall, more S. flexneri isolates in NARMS were from males than females (20% versus 17%; P = 0.09), particularly among persons 20 to 49 years of age (31% versus 16%; P < 0.01).
Seasonality. Among the 1,278 S. sonnei isolates, 233 (18%) were isolated in the winter quarter (December, January, and February), 282 (22%) in the spring (March, April, and May), 412 (32%) in the summer (June, July, and August), and 351 (27%) in the fall (September, October, and November). Among S. flexneri isolates, similar proportions of isolates (24% to 27%) were isolated in each quarter.
Antimicrobial resistance. Among the 1,604 Shigella isolates tested, 115 (7%) were pansusceptible (97 [8%] of 1,278 S. sonnei, 14 [5%] of 295 S. flexneri, 3 [17%] of 18 S. boydii, and 1 [14%] of 7 S. dysenteriae isolates). Large proportions of isolates were resistant to ampicillin (1,251 [78%]), streptomycin (891 [56%]), sulfamethoxazole (757 [47%]), and TMP-SMX (744 [46%]). Resistance to both ampicillin and TMP-SMX was seen in 613 (38%) of isolates (Table 1).
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None of the Shigella isolates tested were resistant or had decreased susceptibility to ceftriaxone (MIC
4 µg/ml). Only one isolate (S. flexneri) was resistant to ciprofloxacin; it was obtained from a child who recently traveled to China (7). In addition, 19 (1%) isolates (13 S. sonnei, 5 S. flexneri, and 1 S. boydii isolate) were resistant to nalidixic acid; 12 (63%) of these isolates also had decreased susceptibility (MIC > 0.125 µg/ml) to ciprofloxacin.
Among the 1,604 isolates tested, 1,031 (64%) were resistant to two or more agents (multidrug resistant). Common resistance patterns included the combination of ampicillin, streptomycin, sulfamethoxazole, and tetracycline resistance (322 [31%]), ampicillin, streptomycin, and sulfamethoxazole resistance (149 [14%]), and ampicillin and streptomycin resistance (108 [10%]). Resistance to the combination of ampicillin, chloramphenicol, streptomycin, sulfamethoxazole, and tetracycline was seen in 85 (8%) isolates.
The prevalence of TMP-SMX- or ampicillin- and TMP-SMX-resistant Shigella sonnei isolates varied by geographic region (Fig. 1). Among S. sonnei isolates, 66% of 493 in the Northeast, 27% of 421 in the South, 30% of 238 in the Midwest, and 80% of 126 in the West were resistant to TMP-SMX. Among S. sonnei isolates, 54% of 493 in the Northeast, 25% of 421 in the South, 22% of 238 in the Midwest, and 65% of 126 in the West were resistant to both ampicillin and TMP-SMX. No geographic variability was found among S. flexneri isolates; 47% of 142 in the Northeast, 37% of 46 in the South, 44% of 34 in the Midwest, and 29% of 73 in the West were resistant to TMP-SMX. Among S. flexneri isolates, 41% of 142 in the Northeast, 35% of 46 in the South, 38% of 34 in the Midwest, and 23% of 73 in the West were resistant to both ampicillin and TMP-SMX.
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Overall, the proportion of Shigella isolates resistant to ampicillin, TMP-SMX, and both agents increased since national surveys were conducted in 1986 and 1995. Over this 16-year period, the proportion resistant to ampicillin increased from 32% to 67% to 78%, the proportion resistant to TMP-SMX increased from 7% to 35% to 46%, and the proportion resistant to both agents increased from 6% to 19% to 38% (15, 46).
| DISCUSSION |
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Few Shigella isolates were resistant to nalidixic acid (n = 19) or ciprofloxacin (n = 1), and none was resistant to ceftriaxone. While these agents may offer reliable results when used for empirical treatment of shigellosis, clinicians and public health officials should anticipate increasing resistance to them as their use increases. Clinical experience also supports the use of macrolides, such as azithromycin, for therapy of shigellosis; however, NARMS does not currently include data on susceptibility to any representative of this class of antimicrobial agents (24).
A majority of isolates that were resistant to nalidixic acid also had decreased susceptibility to ciprofloxacin. Although clinical failures to treat nalidixic acid-resistant Shigella infection with fluoroquinolones have not been reported, clinicians should be aware that failures have been reported for Salmonella infections caused by strains that were resistant to nalidixic acid and had decreased susceptibility to ciprofloxacin (13, 40).
There were regional differences in the prevalence of TMP-SMX resistance among Shigella sonnei isolates. TMP-SMX resistance was found in 30% of S. sonnei isolates in the Midwest NARMS sites compared to 66% and 80% of S. sonnei isolates from the Northeast and West, respectively. A similar trend was seen for isolates of S. sonnei resistant to both ampicillin and TMP-SMX. The geographic differences in resistance patterns may be a result of clonal spread of isolates. One study conducted during an outbreak of shigellosis in a day-care center revealed that pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and antimicrobial susceptibility patterns were identical in all outbreak strains, while nonoutbreak strains isolated during the outbreak period had indistinguishable pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns but different antimicrobial susceptibility patterns. Therefore, the occurrence of outbreaks of shigellosis in areas captured by NARMS sites in the Northeast or West regions could account for the geographic differences in resistance patterns observed. Because molecular typing of organisms is not routinely performed by NARMS, we cannot exclude this possibility.
Our study confirms that infection with S. sonnei is particularly common among young children and among women aged 20 to 40 years, while S. flexneri infections occur more frequently in adult men aged 30 to 49 years. The higher median age among persons infected with S. flexneri and the relatively greater proportion of S. flexneri isolates in adult men may reflect the occurrence of sexually transmitted shigellosis in the population of men who have sex with men (MSM), although outbreaks of S. sonnei infections have also recently been reported in this community (12, 45). Our data indicate that persons with TMP-SMX-resistant S. sonnei infection were more likely to be men and were older than persons with TMP-SMX-susceptible infections. The recently reported outbreak of S. sonnei among MSM in California was caused by a TMP-SMX-resistant strain. Furthermore, a high rate of human immunodeficiency virus infection has been reported among MSM with S. sonnei infection in the Bay Area (6). The widespread use of TMP-SMX for prophylaxis of pneumocystis pneumonia among MSM may predispose this population of adult men to TMP-SMX-resistant S. sonnei infections. An extensive outbreak of TMP-SMX-sensitive S. sonnei infection among day-care center attendees in the mid-Atlantic regions from 2001 to 2003 may also have contributed to the relatively lower percentage of TMP-SMX resistance among S. sonnei isolates from the South and Midwest and to the lower median age of persons infected with TMP-SMX-susceptible strains (9).
Transmission of shigellosis is primarily fecal-oral, and no Shigella vaccines are available in the United States. Because it takes only few organisms to transmit the infection, hand washing has been promoted as the single most important control measure to reduce the spread of shigellosis (23) and is especially critical in limiting the spread of shigellosis among young children in day-care centers (28). Many state health departments require exclusion of food handlers, health-care workers, child-care providers, and children who attend day care centers while they are symptomatic and until one or more negative stool cultures have been obtained (41). In these situations, appropriate antimicrobial use can greatly reduce the inconvenience and cost incurred during outbreaks, since most persons will cease to excrete Shigella within 72 h of starting appropriate antimicrobial therapy compared with carriage of up to several weeks that can occur without therapy (26).
The high prevalence of antimicrobial resistance among Shigella isolates noted in this study limits safe and efficacious treatment options for shigellosis, particularly for children. Where resistance to ampicillin and TMP-SMX is common, appropriate antimicrobial agents for the treatment of shigellosis are limited to nalidixic acid or fluoroquinolones, ceftriaxone, or azithromycin (18, 24, 42). Nalidixic acid (55 mg/kg/24 h in four divided doses for 5 days), a narrow-spectrum quinolone, is effective and approved in the United States for treatment of children older than 3 months (18). The broader-spectrum fluoroquinolones, while effective in treating shigellosis in children, are not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for use in children aged 18 years or younger because some fluoroquinolones have been shown to cause cartilage damage in juvenile animals (8). However, ciprofloxacin, the fluoroquinolone most extensively studied in children, has been successfully used to treat acute invasive diarrhea in children without the development of joint abnormalities (25, 37). Fluoroquinolones may be justified in children, after risks and benefits of treatment are discussed with parents, when no other oral agent is available and in cases of severe shigellosis caused by a multidrug-resistant strain (4).
Mobile genetic units, including plasmids, gene cassettes in integrons, and transposons, are important in the spread of resistant determinants among Shigella isolates (32, 47). Trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole resistance is most commonly acquired through a plasmid-encoded variant of the dihydrofolate reductase enzyme (20). Ampicillin resistance arises as a result of beta-lactamases similar to TEM-1 or OXA-1, whose genes may be located on chromosomes, plasmids, or transposons (30). Although resistance to quinolones is commonly mediated through chromosomal mutations rather than mobile genetic units, certain plasmids have been shown to contribute to quinolone resistance by increasing the rate of spontaneous mutation (3, 5).
Reports of antimicrobial resistance trends in Shigella isolates from other countries raise the specter of wider resistance to nalidixic acid, fluoroquinolones, and ceftriaxone in the future.
A recent report from the United Kingdom revealed a 13% nalidixic acid resistance among Shigella sonnei isolates, with all isolates also exhibiting decreased susceptibility to ciprofloxacin (MIC, 0.25 to 1.0 mg/liter) (13). A study from Japan reports a 26% prevalence of nalidixic acid resistance among Shigella sonnei isolates (21). Fluoroquinolone resistance in S. dysenteriae isolates has been reported recently from Bangladesh, India, and Nepal (29, 38, 43, 44). Finally, with the gradual increase in extended-spectrum beta-lactamases detected in Klebsiella and other Enterobacteriaceae, an increase in extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Shigella strains has been reported since 1999 (2). Ceftriaxone-resistant strains of S. sonnei and S. flexneri have been reported from Korea, Argentina, France, Turkey, and Taiwan (1, 17, 22, 33, 34). The beta-lactamases described in these reports included CTX-M-14, CTX-M-2, SHV-2, CTX-M-3, and CMY-2 type AmpC.
Our study has several limitations. Laboratory-based surveillance systems, such as NARMS, may overestimate the prevalence of resistance among Shigella isolates because persons infected with resistant strains who fail empirical treatment are more likely to get a stool culture for continued diarrhea than are persons infected with susceptible strains who respond to empirical therapy. In addition, NARMS sites include a nonweighted 37% sample of the U.S. population, limiting generalizability of the data. Nonetheless, there was good agreement between demographic data for patients captured by NARMS and the national Shigella laboratory-based surveillance system reported to PHLIS. This high degree of correlation suggests that NARMS surveillance captures a representative sample of all Shigella infections in the United States and that generalizations from NARMS data on antimicrobial resistance among Shigella isolates may be valid despite the fact that NARMS captures only every 10th isolate of Shigella received by participating public health laboratories. In 2003, NARMS surveillance was extended to all 50 state health department laboratories. Finally, interpretation of antimicrobial susceptibility breakpoints without also considering pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of the drug is not straightforward. For example, in vitro resistance testing using axenic medium may reveal that extracellular Shigella isolates are susceptible to aminoglycosides. However, in vivo, the same Shigella isolate, which is a facultative intracellular pathogen, may be resistant to aminoglycosides due to their inability to permeate mammalian cells (39, 49). The CLSI recommends that susceptibility of Shigella to aminoglycosides not be reported to clinicians as "sensitive" because of this discrepancy (14).
Treatment for shigellosis is critical in persons who have severe disease, especially in children and the immunosuppressed. The small but evident increase in the proportion of Shigella isolates that are resistant to nalidixic acid may portend the loss of an important class of antimicrobial agents against Shigella. The continued monitoring of emerging resistance in Shigella isolates through NARMS will be essential to timely and appropriate recommendations for antimicrobial therapy.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We are indebted to the participating local and state health departments and public health laboratories and Timothy Barrett from the Food-borne and Diarrheal Diseases Branch, Division of Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, for their assistance and comments on the manuscript.
| FOOTNOTES |
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| REFERENCES |
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