Abstract

For diagnosis of enteric fever, the culture of the organism from different body fluids is the gold standard. After diagnosis, it is important to treat with the right antibiotic before any complications can occur. The retrospective study is designed to explore the antibiotic sensitivity trend in blood culture positive typhoid fever cases and the extent of drug resistance before treatment is administered. A retrospective study was carried out for culture isolated enteric fever patients admitted in Kathmandu Model Hospital. The discharged records from January 2012 to December 2016 were analyzed. The patients above 15 years and with culture isolated enteric fever were included in the study. One hundred fifty-nine strains of Salmonella typhi and paratyphi were isolated from Jan 2012 to Dec 2016 at Kathmandu Model Hospital. Out of 159 isolated, 125 (78.6%) were Salmonella typhi and 34 (21.4%) were paratyphi. Among them co-trimoxazole, chloramphenicol, ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, cefixime, and ofloxacin demonstrated 100% sensitivity. Similarly, amoxicillin sensitivity was 98.1% (n=156) while ciprofloxacin was sensitive in 6.3% (n=10), intermediately sensitive in 49.1% (n=78) and resistance in 44.7% (n=71).The newer quinolone levofloxacin showed 78.5% (n=11) sensitivity. Azithromycin was sensitive in 99.2% (n=132) of total isolated Salmonella species both typhi and paratyphi. A high degree of sensitivity was noted to chloramphenicol and co-trimoxazole, showing sensitivity has returned to conventional antibiotics. The drug-like ofloxacin is still the best responding drug in our contest whereas ciprofloxacin resistance is still high, but five years patterns show a trend of rollback of sensitivity.

Highlights

  • Typhoid or enteric fever causes prolonged illness characterized by bacteremia with Salmonella typhi

  • The quinolones group of drugs emerged as the treatment of choice for typhoid fever but resistance developed eventually which led to a shift in the thirdgeneration cephalosporins.[3]

  • Our study showed ciprofloxacin was resistant in 44.7% cases and intermediately sensitive in 49.1% patients, but the study done by Dhurba et al[13] in 2012 showed both ofloxacin and ciprofloxacin were resistant in only 1.8% each and intermediately sensitive in 7% and 18.4% of patients respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Typhoid or enteric fever causes prolonged illness characterized by bacteremia with Salmonella typhi. In the late 1980s, some Salmonella typhi strains developed simultaneous plasmid-mediated resistance to ampicillin, chloramphenicol and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.[2] The quinolones group of drugs emerged as the treatment of choice for typhoid fever but resistance developed eventually which led to a shift in the thirdgeneration cephalosporins.[3] The present retrospective study is designed to explore the antibiotic sensitivity trend in blood culture positive typhoid fever cases and the extent of drug resistance before treatment is administered. For diagnosis of enteric fever, the culture of the organism from different body fluids is the gold standard. The retrospective study is designed to explore the antibiotic sensitivity trend in blood culture positive typhoid fever cases and the extent of drug resistance before treatment is administered

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