We sought to evaluate the effect of antepartum and intrapartum antibiotic use on antimicrobial-resistant neonatal sepsis.
Study Design
We analyzed perinatal outcomes for 8474 pregnancies (8593 live births) delivered at 6 hospitals. Data were collected regarding maternal antibiotic use and perinatal course, neonatal cultures, and outcomes. The diagnosis of confirmed neonatal sepsis required at least one positive blood or cerebrospinal fluid culture. Neonatal cultures were evaluated on the basis of the occurrence and timing of maternal antibiotic exposure.
Results
There were 96 neonates with confirmed sepsis (11.2/1000 live births). Sepsis was 19.3-fold more common after preterm birth (57 vs 3. 1/1000; P <.001), with 76% of septic infants being delivered preterm. Forty-five percent of pathogens were ampicillin resistant. Ampicillin resistance increased with preterm birth (50% vs 26%; P =. 04), antepartum antibiotics (57% vs 34%; P =.03), intrapartum antibiotics (55% vs 28%; P <.01), and any prenatal antibiotic exposure (52% vs 22%; P =.01). Infection with an organism resistant to at least one maternal antibiotic was more common with intrapartum antibiotic exposure than with antepartum exposure only (57% vs 17%; P =.01). Regarding early-onset sepsis (n = 55), ampicillin resistance was more common with intrapartum antibiotics (50% vs 16%; P <.01), and resistance to at least one maternally administered antibiotic was more frequent with intrapartum exposure (56.7% vs 0%; P <.01).
Conclusions
Maternal antibiotic treatment is associated with neonatal sepsis by organisms resistant to ampicillin and to maternally administered antibiotics.
antepartum antibiotic use neonatal sepsis resistance, intrapartum antibiotics drug-resistant infant infection, ampicillin resistance neonatal sepsis preterm birth, maternal antibiotic exposure antimicrobial resistant neonatal outcomes, prenatal antibiotic use preterm delivery sepsis risk, early onset neonatal sepsis antibiotic resistance, Mercer antibiotic resistance neonatal sepsis pregnancy, intrapartum vs antepartum antibiotic resistance newborn, group B streptococcus prophylaxis antibiotic resistance neonatal, perinatal antibiotic exposure drug resistant pathogens
PMID 10521735 10521735 DOI 10.1016/s0002-9378(99)70307-8 10.1016/s0002-9378(99)70307-8
Cite this article
Mercer, B. M., Carr, T. L., Beazley, D. D., Crouse, D. T., & Sibai, B. M. (1999). Antibiotic use in pregnancy and drug-resistant infant sepsis. *American journal of obstetrics and gynecology*, *181*(4), 816-821. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0002-9378(99)70307-8
Mercer BM, Carr TL, Beazley DD, Crouse DT, Sibai BM. Antibiotic use in pregnancy and drug-resistant infant sepsis. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1999;181(4):816-821. doi:10.1016/s0002-9378(99)70307-8
Mercer, B. M., et al. "Antibiotic use in pregnancy and drug-resistant infant sepsis." *American journal of obstetrics and gynecology*, vol. 181, no. 4, 1999, pp. 816-821.
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