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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, Jul 1996, 1633-1639, Vol 40, No. 7
PC Fuchs, AL Barry and SD Brown
More than 3,000 consecutive clinical bacterial isolates from 10 U.S.
medical centers were subjected to standard broth microdilution and disk
diffusion tests to determine their susceptibilities to levofloxacin,
ofloxacin, D-ofloxacin, and ciprofloxacin. Levofloxacin was confirmed to be
twice as active as ofloxacin and to have activity comparable to that of
ciprofloxacin, with minor variations in activity against some species. The
prevalence of resistant isolates was 7.1% to levofloxacin, 9.3% to
ciprofloxacin, and 11.2% to ofloxacin. The susceptibilities of some species
to the quinolones were less than those reported in previous studies.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates had the greatest variability in their
susceptibilities to the three drugs between the participating centers. Two
proposed zone size breakpoints for levofloxacin disk tests yielded similar
low error rates. Ofloxacin and ciprofloxacin susceptibility test results
correlated reasonably well with those of levofloxacin and could be used as
surrogate indicators of levofloxacin susceptibility, but that resulted in
some serious errors, and thus, direct testing of levofloxacin
susceptibility is preferable. Replicate testing of standard quality control
strains confirmed the established and proposed quality control parameters
for all three quinolones tested.
Copyright © 1996 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Prevalence of resistance to three fluoroquinolones: assessment of levofloxacin disk test error rates and surrogate predictors of levofloxacin susceptibility. AST Surveillance Group
Clinical Microbiology Institute, Tualatin, Oregon 97062, USA.
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