Litcius/Paper detail

<b>Rise in the prevalence of resistance to extended-spectrum cephalosporins in the USA, nursing homes and antibiotic prescribing in outpatient and inpatient</b> <b>settings</b>

Edward Goldstein

2021Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The prevalence of resistance to extended-spectrum (ES) cephalosporins for multiple types of infections treated in US hospitals and the incidence of hospitalization with ESBL-producing Enterobacteriaceae (many of which are detected in nursing home residents) have grown markedly in recent years. Here, I review these developments, as well as evidence for their adverse consequences, including the increase in the overall burden of bacterial infections due to proliferation of ESBL-producing/ES cephalosporin-resistant bacteria, the contribution of ESBL-producing/ES cephalosporin-resistant bacteria to the increase in the burden of mortality associated with bacterial infections and the contribution of the proliferation of ESBL-producing bacteria to the prevalence of carbapenem resistance. I argue that in order to mitigate the escalation of these phenomena, a reduction in outpatient prescribing of cephalosporins, especially to older adults, mitigation of transmission of ESBL-producing organisms in nursing homes and a reduction in inpatient prescribing of ES cephalosporins (which has seen a major increase in recent years) are needed.

Topics & Concepts

CephalosporinMedicineAntibioticsIncidence (geometry)Antibiotic resistanceCarbapenemIntensive care medicinePediatricsMicrobiologyInternal medicineBiologyOpticsPhysicsAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaAntibiotic Use and ResistanceUrinary Tract Infections Management