Community acquired pneumonia due to antibiotic resistant-Streptococcus pneumoniae: diagnosis, management and prevention.

Publication date: Feb 10, 2025

A resurgence of pneumococcal pneumonia has been observed after a marked reduction in the early COVID-19 pandemic. Penicillin-nonsusceptible Streptococcus pneumoniae is regarded as a WHO priority pathogen. Overall antibiotic resistance rates in S. pneumoniae have increased due to increase in antibiotic consumption and changes in serotype distribution, partly driven by the rollout of pneumococcal vaccination. Isolates from pneumococcal pneumonia have higher resistance rates than those from invasive pneumococcal disease. New antibiotics have been approved for treatment of community-acquired pneumonia, and are active against multidrug-resistant S. pneumoniae. Pneumococcal vaccines in both children and adults are effective in reducing the burden of pneumococcal pneumonia in adults, though some circulating vaccine and nonvaccine serotypes are driving antibiotic resistance. Continual surveillance of serotype and resistance patterns of S. pneumoniae causing pneumonia in adult populations is important after the introduction of new pneumococcal vaccines. Novel pneumococcal vaccine platforms are needed to overcome the threats of serotype replacement and antibiotic resistance.

Concepts Keywords
Antibiotic Acquired
Driving Adults
Effective Antibiotic
Pneumoniae Community
Vaccination Diagnosis
Pneumococcal
Pneumonia
Pneumoniae
Rates
Resistance
Resistant
Serotype
Streptococcus
Vaccine
Vaccines

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH pneumonia
disease MESH pneumococcal pneumonia
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease IDO pathogen
disease IDO antibiotic resistance
disease MESH pneumococcal disease

Original Article

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