BackgroundPhysicians depend on reliable information on the local epidemiology of infection and antibiotic resistance rates to guide empiric treatment in critically ill patients. As these data are scarce for Central Africa, we performed a retrospective analysis of microbiological findings from a secondary care hospital in Gabon.MethodsMicrobiological reports from 2009 to 2012 were used to assess the non-susceptibility rates of the three most common isolates from six major types of infections (bloodstream, ear-eye-nose-throat, surgical site, skin and soft tissue, urinary tract and wound infection).ResultsA high diversity of pathogens was found, but Staphylococcus aureus was predominant in the majority of infections. Overall, the three most prevalent pathogens in children were S. aureus (33.7%), Streptococcus pyogenes (8.1%) and Escherichia coli (4.5%) and in adults S. aureus (23.5%), E. coli (15.1%) and Klebsiella pneumoniae (7.4%). In total, 5.8% (n = 19) of all S. aureus isolates were methicillin resistant. The proportion of extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL) producing Enterobacteriaceae was 15.4% (n = 78), 49.4% of all K. pneumoniae were ESBL-producer (n = 42).ConclusionThe high diversity of potential pathogens and high resistance rates in Gram-negative bacteria challenge a rational empiric use of antibiotics. Countrywide continuous sentinel surveillance is therefore urgently needed.
ESBL colonization in hospitalized children in Gabon is high. The risk of nosocomial transmission of ESBL-E is a challenge in rural Africa and underlines the need for sentinel surveillance in the absence of a broad decentralized microbiology laboratory.
Staphylococcus aureus colonization is a risk factor for invasive disease. There is a need to understand S. aureus colonization in infancy as the burden of S. aureus infections in infants is high. We aimed to investigate the transmission of S. aureus between mothers and their newborns during the first year after delivery in an African setting. In a longitudinal cohort study, colonization of Gabonese mother-infant pairs was assessed at delivery and after 1, 9 and 12 months. Swabs were taken from mothers (nares, mammillae) and infants (nares and throat). Isolates were characterized and risk factors for colonization were assessed using a standardized questionnaire. We recruited 311 mothers and 318 infants including seven sets of twins. Maternal and infant colonization rates declined synchronously following a peak after 1 month at 40% (mothers) and 42% (infants). Maternal colonization was a risk factor for S. aureus carriage in infants. Based on spa typing, direct mother-to-infant transmission was evident in 5.6%. Of all methicillin-resistant isolates (n = 9), 44.4% were related to the USA300 clone; 56.7% (n = 261) of all S. aureus carried Panton-Valentine leukocidin encoding genes. Direct mother-to-infant transmission was rare and cannot explain the increase of carriage in infants within the first month. A transmission from external sources is likely and challenges the S. aureus infection control in newborns and infants in an African setting. The detection of USA300-related MRSA fuels the concern about the spread of this clone in Central Africa.
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