Antimicrobial Susceptibility Survey of Invasive <i>Neisseria meningitidis</i>, United States 2012–2016
Caelin Cubeñas-Potts, Lorraine D. Rodriguez‐Rivera, Adam C. Retchless, Fang Hu, Henju Marjuki, Amy Blain, Lucy A. McNamara, Xin Wang
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Historically, antimicrobial resistance has been rare in US invasive meningococcal disease cases. METHODS: Meningococcal isolates (n = 695) were collected through population-based surveillance, 2012-2016, and national surveillance, 2015-2016. Antimicrobial susceptibility was assessed by broth microdilution. Resistance mechanisms were characterized using whole-genome sequencing. RESULTS: All isolates were susceptible to 6 antibiotics (cefotaxime, ceftriaxone, meropenem, rifampin, minocycline, and azithromycin). Approximately 25% were penicillin or ampicillin intermediate; among these, 79% contained mosaic penA gene mutations. Less than 1% of isolates were penicillin, ampicillin, ciprofloxacin, or levofloxacin resistant. CONCLUSIONS: Penicillin- and ampicillin-intermediate isolates were common, but resistance to clinically relevant antibiotics remained rare.