Impact of antibiotic consumption on the carriage of antibiotic-resistant bacteria by school children

Author:

Farkaš Maja1,Čulina Tatjana23,Sišul Jadranka4,Pelčić Gordana56,Mavrinac Martina7,Mićović Vladimir8,Tambić Andrašević Arjana9

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology, Teaching Institute of Public Health of Primorsko-Goranska County, Rijeka, Croatia

2. Department of School and University Medicine, Teaching Institute of Public Health of Primorsko-Goranska County, Rijeka, Croatia

3. Department of Family Medicine, University of Rijeka Faculty of Medicine, Rijeka, Croatia

4. Private Paediatric Practice, Rijeka, Croatia

5. Department of Paediatrics, Health Care Centre of Primorsko-Goranska County, Rijeka, Croatia

6. Department of Social Sciences and Humanities in Medicine, University of Rijeka Faculty of Medicine, Rijeka, Croatia

7. Department of Medical Informatics, University of Rijeka Faculty of Medicine, Rijeka, Croatia

8. Department of Environmental Health, University of Rijeka Faculty of Medicine, Rijeka, Croatia

9. Division of Bacteriology and Hospital Infections, Department of Clinical Microbiology, University Hospital for Infectious Diseases ‘Dr. Fran Mihaljević’, Zagreb, Croatia

Abstract

Abstract Background Antibiotic consumption in the paediatric population is one of the key drivers of the emergence and spread of antimicrobial resistance, which is a serious global threat to public health and clinical medicine. The aims of this study were to investigate systemic antibiotic consumption in school children and to assess the associations among antibiotic consumption, carriage rate and resistance of respiratory pathogens residing in the upper respiratory tract mucosa. Methods In this prospective study, throat and nasopharyngeal swabs from 450 school children, 6–15 years of age (225 healthy children and 225 patients who were ambulatory treated for upper respiratory tract infection), were processed in 2014 in Rijeka, Croatia, and clinical data were obtained via a questionnaire. Results In total, 17% of the children had consumed an antibiotic in the previous 6 months, including 7% of the healthy children and 27% of the acutely ill patients. The most commonly prescribed antibiotics were amoxicillin (26%), amoxicillin with clavulanic acid (26%) and macrolides (18%). Respiratory pathogens were more frequently isolated from children who had consumed an antibiotic in the previous 6 months [odds ratio (OR) 3.67, P < 0.001]. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria were also more frequent in children who had been exposed to antibiotics (OR 5.44, P < 0.001). Conclusions Penicillins are the most frequently used antibiotics among school children. The results of this study demonstrate that antibiotic consumption is linked with higher carriage rates and resistance rates of respiratory tract pathogens. Therefore, rational use of antibiotics could prevent the emergence and spread of resistant bacteria.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference30 articles.

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