Goals: The aim of this study was to determine the antibiotic resistance profile of serotypes of Streptococcus pneumoniae strains circulating in Bangui. Methodology: A prospective and analytical analysis was carried ou...Goals: The aim of this study was to determine the antibiotic resistance profile of serotypes of Streptococcus pneumoniae strains circulating in Bangui. Methodology: A prospective and analytical analysis was carried out at the National Laboratory of Clinical Biology and Public Health from 2017 to 2022. The strains came from our study on the contribution to the study of antibiotic sensitivity of Streptococcus pneumoniae strains. The multiplex PCR test was used for its cost-effectiveness in terms of amplifiers which can be purified in order to be sequenced. It also makes it possible to detect several germs as well as their serotypes. For a PCR reaction, several elements are involved in the reaction medium or Master Mix. These are the desoxyribonucleotides (dNTPs), the magnesium ions (MgCl2) and the primers. A set of 14 primers divided into 3 classes were used. Class 1 primers served as an internal control by targeting the cpsA gene. It is a highly conserved gene found in capsular loci characterized to date. The primers of the second class were used to target specific serotypes by specific reactions (out of six possibilities). The group reaction was carried out using the primers of the third class in order to carry out an initial screening of the samples and to classify the pneumococcal isolates. Related serotypes were grouped based on the amplification of common genes. Using the technique of electrophoresis on agarose gel and an ultraviolet radiation device, the migration bands are then visualized and analyzed. The data collected had been entered into Excel 2010 and analyzed with Epi info 7. The exact Fischer chi2 test at the 5% threshold, the relative risk and its 95% confidence interval were used to compare the proportions and determine the associations. Results: 187 antibiotic-resistant strains of Streptococcus pneumoniae were collected. The average frequency of serotypes 1, 9A, 4 and untypeable identified were 43.59%, 18.18%, 18.27% and 39.57% respectively. The frequency of serotype 1 was predominant for the age group over five years old with 56.88%. The male sex was predominant with 55.08% for serotype 1. Resistance to penicillin and gentamicin for serotype 1 during this study, for the age group under 5 years old, was 77%. For serotypes 19A and 4, tetracycline resistance was predominant with 20% for the age group under 5 years. The resistance to penicillin and gentamicin of non-typeable serotypes was 33% for the age group under 5 years old. For the age group over 5 years old, resistance to erythromycin predominated at 37%. The distribution of serotypes by sex depending on antibiotic resistance was variable. There was a statistically significant association between identified serotypes and antibiotic resistance (p Conclusion: The study determined serotypes 1, serotypes 19A, serotypes 4 and non-typeable serotypes. These results would be due to the quality of vaccination or poor protection of vaccines.展开更多
文摘Goals: The aim of this study was to determine the antibiotic resistance profile of serotypes of Streptococcus pneumoniae strains circulating in Bangui. Methodology: A prospective and analytical analysis was carried out at the National Laboratory of Clinical Biology and Public Health from 2017 to 2022. The strains came from our study on the contribution to the study of antibiotic sensitivity of Streptococcus pneumoniae strains. The multiplex PCR test was used for its cost-effectiveness in terms of amplifiers which can be purified in order to be sequenced. It also makes it possible to detect several germs as well as their serotypes. For a PCR reaction, several elements are involved in the reaction medium or Master Mix. These are the desoxyribonucleotides (dNTPs), the magnesium ions (MgCl2) and the primers. A set of 14 primers divided into 3 classes were used. Class 1 primers served as an internal control by targeting the cpsA gene. It is a highly conserved gene found in capsular loci characterized to date. The primers of the second class were used to target specific serotypes by specific reactions (out of six possibilities). The group reaction was carried out using the primers of the third class in order to carry out an initial screening of the samples and to classify the pneumococcal isolates. Related serotypes were grouped based on the amplification of common genes. Using the technique of electrophoresis on agarose gel and an ultraviolet radiation device, the migration bands are then visualized and analyzed. The data collected had been entered into Excel 2010 and analyzed with Epi info 7. The exact Fischer chi2 test at the 5% threshold, the relative risk and its 95% confidence interval were used to compare the proportions and determine the associations. Results: 187 antibiotic-resistant strains of Streptococcus pneumoniae were collected. The average frequency of serotypes 1, 9A, 4 and untypeable identified were 43.59%, 18.18%, 18.27% and 39.57% respectively. The frequency of serotype 1 was predominant for the age group over five years old with 56.88%. The male sex was predominant with 55.08% for serotype 1. Resistance to penicillin and gentamicin for serotype 1 during this study, for the age group under 5 years old, was 77%. For serotypes 19A and 4, tetracycline resistance was predominant with 20% for the age group under 5 years. The resistance to penicillin and gentamicin of non-typeable serotypes was 33% for the age group under 5 years old. For the age group over 5 years old, resistance to erythromycin predominated at 37%. The distribution of serotypes by sex depending on antibiotic resistance was variable. There was a statistically significant association between identified serotypes and antibiotic resistance (p Conclusion: The study determined serotypes 1, serotypes 19A, serotypes 4 and non-typeable serotypes. These results would be due to the quality of vaccination or poor protection of vaccines.