Prevalence and mechanisms of macrolide resistance in clinical isolates of group A streptococci from Ontario, Canada

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Abstract

A total of 3,205 group A streptoccal isolates were collected in 1997 through a private laboratory which serves community physicians in southern Ontario and which represents a population base of 6 million people. Nonsusceptibility to erythromycin was detected for 67 (2.1%) isolates both by disk diffusion and by broth microdilution. Of these, 47 (70%) were susceptible to clindamycin and were found by PCR to possess the mef gene. Of the other 20 strains, 18 and 2 showed inducible and constitutive resistance, respectively, to clindamycin. Nineteen of these strains were shown by PCR to possess the ermTR gene, and a single constitutively resistant strain harbored an ermB gene. Sixteen (24%) erythromycin-resistant strains were also resistant to tetracycline. All were susceptible to penicillin and chloramphenicol.

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De Azavedo, J. C. S., Yeung, R. H., Bast, D. J., Duncan, C. L., Borgia, S. B., & Low, D. E. (1999). Prevalence and mechanisms of macrolide resistance in clinical isolates of group A streptococci from Ontario, Canada. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 43(9), 2144–2147. https://doi.org/10.1128/aac.43.9.2144

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