1. A Retrospective National Study on Colonization Rate and Antimicrobial Susceptibility of
- Author
-
Hye Gyung, Bae, Jungmi, Hong, Young-Jin, Kim, Kyoung-Ryul, Lee, Kyungwon, Lee, Seong Jin, Choi, and Young, Uh
- Subjects
Pregnancy ,Clindamycin ,Republic of Korea ,Vagina ,Humans ,Female ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Pregnancy Complications, Infectious ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Retrospective Studies ,Streptococcus agalactiae - Abstract
The prevalence of Group BFrom January 2018 to December 2020, data from the Seoul Clinical Laboratories on vaginal swab cultures were retrospectively analyzed to detect maternal GBS carriers. Each swab specimen was inoculated onto a 5% blood agar plate and incubated at 35℃-37℃ in a 5% COThe overall nationwide GBS colonization rate in pregnant Korean women was found to be 10.6% (3578/33721). The maternal GBS colonization rates ranged from 10.5%-10.8% over the 3-year study period. The GBS colonization rates by province, in descending order, were as follows: Jeolla-do, 13.2%; Gangwon-do, 12.0%; Chungcheong-do, 11.8%; Gyeonggi-do, 11.3%; Seoul, 10.2%; and Gyeongsang-do, 9.6%. During the study period, the resistance rates against chloramphenicol, levofloxacin, clindamycin, erythromycin, and tetracycline were 2.6%-2.7%, 18.2%-19.6%, 33.4%-35.7%, 35.6%-36.8%, and 50.5%-53.3%, respectively.In pregnant Korean women, GBS colonization rates were in the range of 9.6%-13.2%, with Gyeongsang-do being the lowest and Jeolla-do the highest. The resistance rate against clindamycin was high (33.4%-35.7%). GBS colonization rates during pregnancy should be studied nationwide according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-recommended guidelines with periodic antimicrobial resistance monitoring.
- Published
- 2022