Title: Drug Resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae
1Drug Resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae
2 the microbes are educated to resist penicillin
and a host of penicillin-fast organisms is bred
out which can be passed on to other individuals
and perhaps from there to others until they reach
someone who gets a
septicemia or a pneumonia which penicillin cannot
save. In such cases the thoughtless person
playing with penicillin treatment is morally
responsible for the death of the man who finally
succumbs to infection with the penicillin-resistan
t organism. I hope this evil can be averted.
Sir Alexander Fleming,
New York Times, June 26, 1945
3 Importance of Pneumococcal Infections in the
U.S.
- 2000 CDC Active Bacterial Core Surveillance
(ABCs)
4Drug ResistantStreptococcus pneumoniae
- Emerged in Spain and South Africa
- Emerged in the U.S. in the last decade
- Use of antibiotics for viral infections
- Threatening use of antibiotics for common
infections
5Resistance and AntibioticPrescribing
- Risk factors for resistant S. pneumoniae are
- young age (lt 1 year)
- higher socioeconomic status
- day-care attendance
- recent receipt of antibiotics (2-5 times greater
risk)
Pediatrics 199392761-7.
6Pneumococcal Carriage in Day Care Center
Outbreak, East Tennessee, 1996
Craig, Clin Infect Dis 1999291257-1264
7Penicillin Resistance in S. pneumoniae U.S.
1979-2003
vaccine
1979-1994 CDC Sentinel Surveillance Network
1995-2003 CDC Active Bacterial Core
Surveillance (ABCs) /Emerging Infections Program
2003 data are preliminary
8Trends in Pneumococcal Susceptibility, U.S,
1995-2000
CDC Active Bacterial Core Surveillance (ABCs)
9Invasive Pneumococcal Disease, Proportion of
Non-susceptible Isolates, Tennessee, 1999-2003
10Invasive Pneumococcal Disease, Tennessee,
1995-2003
11Evidence of Excessive Antibiotic Use in the US
- NAMCS data (1992)
- Antibiotics 2nd leading class of Rx in the US
- most for RTI (JAMA 1995273214-19)
- Antibiotic use in children
- URI 44
- Colds 46
- Bronchitis 75
- (JAMA 1998279875-77)
12UPDATE!
- NAMCS data (2000) Children lt 15
- Population-based antibiotic prescriptions
- decreased 40
- Visit-based antibiotic prescriptions
- decreased 29
- Declines coincide with increased media attention
- Antibiotic resistance has continued to increase
through the 1990s
(JAMA 20022873096-3102)
13Antibiotic use in Tennessee
- In 2002, TN had the highest prescription rates in
the country. - Novartis Pharmacy Benefit Report 2002 Facts and
Figures. - In 2001, Tennessees utilization rates for
-Penicillins, - -Cephalosporins
- -Trimethoprims
- were over 20 higher than the national average.
Novartis Pharmacy Benefit Report 2001 Facts and
Figures.
14Oral Antibiotic Prescriptions, Knox County,
1996-1999
Perz, JAMA 20022873103-3109
15Changes in Prescribing From Year 1 to Year 3, per
Child-year
16Ratio of Prescriptions URI Visits, Knox County,
1996-1999
17Reasons for Antibiotic Use Conclusions from 8
Focus Groups
- Physician Concerns
- patient expects antibiotic
- diagnostic uncertainty
- time pressure
- Patient Concerns
- want clear explanation
- green nasal discharge
- need to return to work/child care
Antibiotic Prescription
Barden, Clin Pediatric 199837665-672
18Patient Satisfaction and Antibiotics
- Satisfaction predicted by
- time spent by MD explaining illness
- patient understanding of treatment choice
- Satisfaction not predicted by receipt of
antibiotics
Hamm, J Fam Pract 19964356Mangione-Smith,
Pediatrics 1999103711-8
19Can Resistance Trends Be Reversed?
- Public health campaign in Iceland following
dramatic increase in the rates of
penicillin-resistant pneumococci from 2.3 to 20
in 4 years - Rates fell from peak of 20 in 1993 to 16.9 in
1994 - Carriage rates of resistant strains among day
care attendees dropped from 20 to 15 in same
period JAMA 1996275175
20Principles of Judicious Antimicrobial
UseOtitis Media - Key Messages
- Episodes of otitis media should be classified as
acute otitis media (AOM) or otitis media with
effusion (OME) - Antibiotics are not indicated for initial
treatment of OME
21Principles of Judicious Antimicrobial
UseRhinitis and Sinusitis- Key Messages
- Rhinitis
- antibiotics should not be given for viral
rhinosinusitis - Sinusitis
- prolonged URI symptoms
- more severe URI symptoms (i.e. facial swelling,
high fever) - antibiotic treatment with the most
narrow-spectrum agent
22Principles of Judicious Antimicrobial
UsePharyngitis- Key Messages
- Diagnose as group A strep
- Penicillin is the drug of choice in treating
group A strep - use erthromycin if penicillin allergic
23Principles of Judicious Antimicrobial UseCough
and Bronchitis- Key Messages
- Cough/bronchitis rarely needs antibiotics
- Antibiotic treatment for prolonged cough (gt10
days) may be needed - Mycoplasma pneumonia- use macrolide agent for
children gt5
24Prevention - Pneumococcal Vaccination
- 23-valent polysaccharide vaccine (PPV)
- 60 effective in preventing bacteremic
pneumococcal infection in immunocompetent adults - 7-valent conjugate vaccine (PCV-7) for children
age 3 -59 months - gt95 effective in preventing invasive disease in
young children
- Bartlett, Clin Infect Dis 200031347-382
- CDC, MMWR 200049(RR-9)1-34
25Receipt of PCV7 Among Children 19-35 Months,
U.S, 2002-2003
83.7
National Immunization Survey, Q3/2002-Q2/2003
26Appropriate Antibiotic Use Intervention Sites,
2002
27TennesseesAppropriate Antibiotic Use Campaign
- Mission
- To reduce inappropriate antibiotic use and the
spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria that
cause many upper respiratory illnesses through
state and local partnerships
28TAAUC History
- Created in the Spring of 2002 in response to TNs
- high levels of antibiotic resistance
- 2002-2003 Began developing partnerships and
focused on educating health care providers and
parents and relaying the programs key messages - 2003-2004 Continued Year 1 activities, developed
a coalition and partnerships, developed and
produced program materials, and began media
campaign development - 2004-2005 Continuing Year 1 and Year 2
activities, program expansion, development, etc.
29Campaign Goals
- Reduce inappropriate antibiotic use and the
prevalence of antibiotic resistance in Tennessee
by - Increasing parental knowledge of appropriate
antibiotic use - Changing practitioners antibiotic prescribing
behavior -
- Increasing community awareness of appropriate
antibiotic use and resistance
30TAAUC Partners
- Bayer
- Roche
- TennCare
- Head Start
- Lamar Outdoor Advertising
- American Academy of Pediatrics (TN Unit)
- TN Radio Network
- Knox County Health Dept.
- Metropolitan Health Dept. of Nashville and
Davidson County - East TN Regional Office
- St. Thomas Hospital
- East Tennessee Childrens Hospital
- Bristol-Myers Squibb
- University of TN Medical Center
- Vanderbilt University
- Knox County Schools
- Vanderbilt Health Plan
- Blue Cross Blue Shield of TN
- Nashville Academy of Medicine
- Shaller Anderson of TN
- John Deer Health
- TN Pharmacists Association
- UT Medical Center
- GlaxoSmithKline
- Abbott Laboratories
- TN Academy of Family Physicians
- Pfizer
- Xantus
- Daiichi
31Program Components
- Provider Education
- Parent/Childcare Center Education
- Public Education
32TAAUC Billboard
33Conclusions
- Increasing antibiotic resistance threatens
success of antibiotic treatment for common
infections - Many consumers use antibiotics inappropriately
- Decreased antibiotic use has been shown to
reverse antibiotic resistant trends - Physician and public education principles of
appropriate use, educational materials,
presentations mass media
34(No Transcript)
35CDC Treatment Guidelines
- www.cdc.gov/drugresistance/community/technical.htm
TAAUC Websitewww.tennessee.gov/health