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Impact of prophylactic oral azithromycin during labor on azithromycin resistance (AMR) in nasal staphylococcus aureus and streptococcus pneumoniae in women and infants in the multi-country azithromycin prevention in labor use study (a-plus)
Hibberd, P. L., Kim, J. H., Trotta, M., Leal, S. M., Aceituno, A., Ward, D. V., Patel, A., Subramaniam, A., Carlo, W. A., Ahmed, I., Saleem, S., Billah, S. M., Haque, R., Mazariegos, M., Esamai, F., Somannavar, M. S., Goudar, S. S., Chomba, E., Mwenchanya, M., ... Tita, A. T. N. (2026). Impact of prophylactic oral azithromycin during labor on azithromycin resistance (AMR) in nasal staphylococcus aureus and streptococcus pneumoniae in women and infants in the multi-country azithromycin prevention in labor use study (a-plus). PLoS One, 21(4), e0346174. Article e0346174. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0346174
BACKGROUND: Prophylactic oral azithromycin vs. placebo reduced maternal, but not neonatal, mortality/sepsis in the A-PLUS Randomized Trial. While prophylactic intrapartum azithromycin reduces maternal mortality/sepsis, it may promote antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in commensal bacteria,.
METHODS: Randomly selected women and their infants participating in A-PLUS were enrolled in a longitudinal cross-sectional sub-study to assess the presence of azithromycin resistance in selected bacteria in nasal cultures. Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae were cultured on selective agar, then azithromycin-containing agar to select for azithromycin resistant bacteria, identified biochemically. Azithromycin susceptibility was assessed by E-test. Nasal cultures were collected from women and infants between August 11, 2021 and September 18, 2023 during labor/day 1, day 7, 6 weeks, and 3, 6 and 12 months after delivery.
RESULTS: The study enrolled 911 women and 915 liveborn infants at 8 sites in 7 countries. Azithromycin resistance in S aureus was higher and azithromycin susceptibility was lower in women receiving azithromycin compared with those receiving placebo on day 7 (P < 0.001), 6 weeks (P < 0.001) and 3 months (P = 0.009) after delivery. Azithromycin resistance in S aureus was also higher and azithromycin susceptibility was lower 6 weeks after delivery (P < 0.001) in infants born to women receiving azithromycin, Azithromycin resistance in S. pneumoniae was too sparse to interpret.
CONCLUSIONS: There was an increase in prevalence of azithromycin resistance (or reduction in azithromycin susceptibility) in commensal nasal S. aureus between day 7, 6 weeks and 3 months in women exposed to azithromycin vs. placebo and only at 6 weeks in infants exposed to azithromycin vs. placebo. These differences between the azithromycin and placebo groups were no longer detected at 6 and 12 months post-partum in the women and after 6 weeks through 12 months in the infants.
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