A study on viruses and bacteria with particular interest on Mycoplasma pneumoniae in children with exacerbation of asthma from a tertiary care hospital in Sri Lanka.

Access microbiology Pub Date : 2024-07-30 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1099/acmi.0.000778.v5
Lakmini Inoka Wijesooriya, Victoria Chalker, Priyantha Perera, N P Sunil-Chandra
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Abstract

Asthma is a significant public health concern, particularly in children with severe symptoms. Exacerbation of asthma (EOA) is life-threatening, and respiratory infections (RIs) play a crucial role. Though viruses play a significant role in EOA, patients are empirically treated with antibiotics, contributing to antibiotic resistance development. Although there are widely reported associations of EOA with viral or Mycoplasma pneumoniae infections, there are no published data for Sri Lanka. The present study aimed to identify the association of common respiratory viruses, typical respiratory bacterial pathogens and M. pneumoniae in children with EOA and relate them with the compatibility of antimicrobial use. A case-control study was conducted in the paediatric unit of North Colombo Teaching Hospital, Sri Lanka, involving two groups of children between 5 and 15 years of age. Group 1 is children with EOA and Group 2 is children with stable asthma (SA). Each group consisted of 100 children. Sputum/throat swabs were tested for common respiratory viruses using virus-specific fluorescein isothiocyanate-labelled monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), bacteria by routine culture, and M. pneumoniae by real-time polymerase chain reaction. Macrolide resistance in M. pneumoniae was detected using conventional PCR and sequencing specific genetic mutations in the 23S rRNA gene. M. pneumoniae was genotyped using nested multilocus sequence typing, which targeted eight housekeeping genes (ppa, pgm, gyrB, gmk, glyA, atpA, arcC and adk). There was no significant difference in age, gender, demographic or geographical location between the two groups. In children with EOA, antibiotics were used in 66 % (66/100) and macrolides in 42 % (42/100). Samples comprised 78 % (78/100) sputum and 22 % (22/100) throat swabs. Adenovirus was the most common virus identified, and it was significantly higher in children with EOA compared to those with SA. Still, the two groups had no significant difference in typical bacteria findings. M. pneumoniae was detected in one patient with EOA, but none was detected in the SA group. The M. pneumoniae was macrolide-sensitive and ST14 by multilocus sequence typing. This study showed that the empiric use of antibiotics in children with asthma might be better targeted with prior pathogen screening to inform appropriate treatment to minimize antibiotic resistance.

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对斯里兰卡一家三级医院哮喘加重儿童中的病毒和细菌进行研究,尤其关注肺炎支原体。
哮喘是一个重大的公共健康问题,尤其是症状严重的儿童。哮喘加重(EOA)会危及生命,而呼吸道感染(RIs)则起着至关重要的作用。虽然病毒在哮喘加重中起着重要作用,但患者通常会接受抗生素治疗,从而导致抗生素耐药性的产生。尽管有广泛报道称 EOA 与病毒或肺炎支原体感染有关,但在斯里兰卡却没有公开发表的数据。本研究旨在确定 EOA 患儿中常见呼吸道病毒、典型呼吸道细菌病原体和肺炎支原体的相关性,并将其与抗菌药物使用的相容性联系起来。斯里兰卡北科伦坡教学医院儿科开展了一项病例对照研究,涉及两组 5 至 15 岁的儿童。第一组是患有哮喘的儿童,第二组是患有稳定型哮喘(SA)的儿童。每组 100 名儿童。用病毒特异性异硫氰酸荧光素标记的单克隆抗体(MAbs)对痰/咽拭子进行常见呼吸道病毒检测,用常规培养法检测细菌,用实时聚合酶链反应法检测肺炎双球菌。肺炎双球菌对大环内酯类药物的耐药性是通过常规聚合酶链式反应和 23S rRNA 基因的特异性基因突变测序检测出来的。使用巢式多焦点序列分型法对肺炎双球菌进行基因分型,该方法针对八个看家基因(ppa、ppgm、gyrB、ghmk、glyA、atpA、arcC 和 adk)。两组患儿在年龄、性别、人口统计学或地理位置方面均无明显差异。在EOA患儿中,66%(66/100)使用了抗生素,42%(42/100)使用了大环内酯类药物。样本包括78%(78/100)的痰液和22%(22/100)的咽拭子。腺病毒是最常见的病毒,在EOA患儿中的感染率明显高于SA患儿。不过,两组患儿在典型细菌检测结果上没有明显差异。在一名 EOA 患者身上检测到了肺炎双球菌,但在 SA 组中却没有检测到肺炎双球菌。肺炎双球菌对大环内酯类药物敏感,多聚焦序列分型为 ST14。这项研究表明,在对哮喘患儿使用经验性抗生素时,如果事先进行病原体筛查,就能更好地确定适当的治疗方法,从而最大限度地减少抗生素耐药性。
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