clinical isolates of Streptococcus pyogenes were collected from 10 microbiology laboratories in Portugal. All strains were highly sensitive to penicillin (MIC90 = 0.012 mg/liter). The prevalence of erythromycin resistance was 35.8% and of tetracycline resistance 41.4%. The majority (79.6%) of erythromycin-resistant strains were of the MLSr constitutive resistance (CR) phenotype with highlevel resistance to erythromycin (MIC90 > 256 mg/liter) and to clindamycin (MIC90 > 256 mg/liter), 16.7% showed the M phenotype with low-level erythromycin-resistance (MIC90 = 24 mg/liter) and susceptibility to clindamycin, and four isolates showed a phenotype characterized by low-level erythromycin resistance (MIC90 = 8 mg/liter) and high-level clindamycin resistance (MIC9u > 256 mg/liter), not previously described. Erythromycin resistance was not associated with invasive strains. Only minor discrepancies between disk diffusion and E-test methods were observed. T serotyping was very useful for the epidemiological characterization of the strains. The most prevalent T types were Tl, T4, T9, T12, T13, and T28. A statistically significant association with resistance patterns was found: T12 with erythromycin resistance MLSB CR phenotype (p < 0.001), T4 with erythromycin resistance M phenotype (p < 0.001), and T13 with tetracycline resistance (p < 0.01). Because of the high prevalence of resistance, careful surveillance of S. pyogenes isolates in Portugal is essential, routine antimicrobial susceptibility testing in clinical microbiology laboratories should be strongly encouraged, antibiotic prescription should be reviewed, and macrolides should no longer be used in the empirical therapy of acute pharyngitis.
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has been endemic in Hospital de Santa Maria, a 1,300-bed teaching hospital in Lisbon, Portugal, since the mid-1980s with a prevalence of 30% in 1993. A total of 54 MRSA and 93 methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (MSSA) isolates recovered during the first 3 months of 1993 were analyzed for the particular mecA polymorphs and Tn554 attachment sites (in the case of MRSA) and for pulsed-field gel electrophoretic patterns. While all MRSA isolates shared a very similar multidrug resistance antibiogram, molecular methods allowed the identification of an unusually large number of genetic backgrounds (24 different pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns in 54 isolates) and three different mecA polymorphs among the MRSA strains. Similar large variation in the genetic backgrounds of MSSA was observed. The most frequent mecA polymorph (mecA type I) was found in association with three different Tn554 patterns. Among the MRSA strains of Hospital Santa Maria, we found two clonal types previously described in Portugal: one corresponding to the dominant clone in an MRSA outbreak at the pediatric ward of the Lisbon Hospital Dona Estefânia and another one identical to the Iberian epidemic clone identified in several Portuguese hospitals and in MRSA outbreaks in Barcelona and Madrid. This suggests that MRSA clones of Hospital de Santa Maria may have been a reservoir for staphylococcal strains over the past decade.
A nationwide multicenter study (including 25 laboratories) of the antimicrobial susceptibility of bacterial pathogens commonly associated with community-acquired lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI), with testing undertaken in a central laboratory, was conducted in Portugal in 1999. Antimicrobial resistance in Haemophilus influenzae has not increased in the last decade. Of the 498 isolates tested, 12.4% produced beta-lactamase and >95% were susceptible to all antimicrobials except ampicillin. In contrast, there was a rapid increase of resistance in Streptococcus pneumoniae. Of the 312 isolates tested, 24.7% exhibited decreased susceptibility to penicillin (13.5% showed low-level and 11.2% high-level resistance), 13.8% were resistant to erythromycin, clarithromycin and azithromycin, and 13.6% to cefuroxime and to tetracycline. Of the 38 Moraxella catarrhalis tested, 81.6% produced beta-lactamase. Resistance to penicillin, cefuroxime, erythromycin, clarithromycin, and azithromycin in S. pneumoniae and beta-lactamase production in H. influenzae were significantly higher in pediatric patients than in adults. Overall, amoxycillin/clavulanate was the most active antimicrobial agent in vitro against H. influenzae, S. pneumoniae, and M. catarrhalis isolated from patients with community-acquired LRTI in Portugal.
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