[EFFECT OF ETHNICITY ON BACTERIAL RESISTANCE AND OBSTETRICAL OUTCOMES AMONG PREGNANT WOMEN ADMITTED TO MATERNAL-FETAL MEDICINE UNIT WITH THE DIAGNOSIS OF PYELONEPHRITIS DURING 2017-2020].
Journal
Harefuah
ISSN: 0017-7768
Titre abrégé: Harefuah
Pays: Israel
ID NLM: 0034351
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
Jan 2024
Jan 2024
Historique:
medline:
1
2
2024
pubmed:
1
2
2024
entrez:
31
1
2024
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Antibiotic resistance is a worldwide concern. No study has ever examined the correlation between ethnicity and antibiotic resistance. We examined those parameters among hospitalized pregnant patients diagnosed with pyelonephritis. Should ethnic origin play a role in optimizing antibiotic therapy? To better comprehend, we have chosen a cohort of hospitalized pregnant patients with a pyelonephritis diagnosis. A total of 105 cases of patients hospitalized in the Shamir Medical Center between the years 2017-2020 were analysed. Feto-maternal outcomes and antibiotic resistance in relation to ethnicity were plotted statistically using chi-square tests (Arab, 40%; North Africa, 13%; Europe-Ashkenaz,10%; Ethiopia/Iran/Kavkaz/Iraq/other, 3%; Turkey/Uzbekistan/Yemen 2%). Ethnic groups included Arab (40%), others referred as "None-Arab". The antibiotic resistance panel revealed differences comparing the two largest groups (Arab% VS non-Arab%), whereas there was no correlation between any ethnic group and obstetrics parameter. Arab women were more resistant to ciprofloxacin (33% vs 7%, P= 0.026) and less sensitive to imipenem (60% vs 90.9%, P= 0.03); less sensitive to ceftriaxone and cefuroxime. There was a correlation between ethnic origin of pregnant patients diagnosed with pyelonephritis and antibiotic resistance. We hope ethnicity, might, in some cases, assist physicians choosing the optimal therapy.
Types de publication
English Abstract
Journal Article
Langues
heb
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM