Abstract

BackgroundMany upper respiratory pathogens cause similar symptoms. In China, routine molecular tests for upper respiratory pathogens are not widely performed and antibiotics abuse in treating upper respiratory tract infections (URTIs) is a major public health concern.MethodsWe performed qualitative real-time PCR tests to detect common upper respiratory tract pathogens including 9 viruses and 3 bacteria in 1221 nasopharyngeal swabs from patients with fever and influenza-like symptoms in a Chinese city. A quantitative real-time PCR was also performed to measure the bacterial density of the colonizing Streptococcus pneumoniae in these samples.ResultsWe found very diverse pathogens including 81.7% viruses, 11.6% bacteria and 6.7% mixed viruses and bacteria. S. pneumoniae colonization was found in 8.0% of the cases but most of them had low bacterial density (Mean = 3.9 log cfu/ml). We also discovered an increase of S. pneumoniae colonization frequency (but not the density) in patients with detectable upper respiratory tract pathogens, in a pathogen variety-dependent manner.ConclusionsOur study provided strong evidence against empiric antibiotic use for treating URTIs, and highlighted a strong need for improving the diagnostic capacity for URTIs by using more molecular testing in China.

Highlights

  • Many upper respiratory pathogens cause similar symptoms

  • To single out which upper respiratory tract infections (URTIs) pathogen may contribute to this increase, we found most URTI pathogens seem to be associated with higher S. pneumoniae colonization, the only statistically significant contributor was respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection (p = 0.026) (Fig. 3C)

  • It should be noted that in our study, RSV is associated with a higher percentage of co-infections (36.4%) compared to other URTI pathogens, which might be a confounding factor since we have demonstrated mixed infections itself could be associated with increased S. pneumoniae colonization frequency

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Summary

Introduction

Many upper respiratory pathogens cause similar symptoms. In China, routine molecular tests for upper respiratory pathogens are not widely performed and antibiotics abuse in treating upper respiratory tract infections (URTIs) is a major public health concern. It has been well recognized that many pathogens, mainly viruses and some bacteria, cause URTIs but present with almost indistinguishable clinical symptoms [1,2,3]. Antibiotics are mainly prescribed empirically, not based on microbiological investigation [6, 7]. This is problematic for patients with URTIs, for which most clinics and many hospitals in China only offer limited routine tests for the influenza

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