Author:
Diaz Maureen H.,Benitez Alvaro J.,Winchell Jonas M.
Abstract
Mycoplasma pneumoniaeis a leading cause of respiratory infections, including community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). Currently, pathogen-specific testing is not routinely performed in the primary care setting, and the United States lacks a systematic surveillance program forM. pneumoniae. Documentation of individual cases and clusters typically occurs only when severe illness and/or failure to improve with empirical antibiotic therapy is observed. Outbreaks, some lasting for extended periods and involving a large number of cases, occur regularly. However, many more likely go unrecognized due to the lack of diagnostic testing and structured reporting. We reviewed data from 17 investigations of cases, small clusters, and outbreaks ofM. pneumoniaeinfections that were supported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) between 2006 and 2013. We examined 199M. pneumoniae-positive specimens collected during this time period in order to identify trends in antimicrobial resistance and circulating types. Overall, macrolide resistance was identified in approximately 10% ofM. pneumoniaeinfections occurring during this time period. Typing of strains revealed cocirculation of multiple multilocus variable-number tandem-repeat analysis (MLVA) and P1 types throughout this period, including diversity in types detected within individual outbreaks. Three MLVA types (4572, 3562, and 3662) accounted for 97% of the infections during the study period. A systematic surveillance program is necessary to understand the burden ofM. pneumoniaedisease in the United States, facilitate case and outbreak identification, and inform appropriate therapeutic and infection control strategies.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
104 articles.
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