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    Analysis Characterizes Common Wound Microbes in Epidermolysis Bullosa

    Dermatology & Cosmetic Care
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      Madhubani last edited by

      Wound cultures from patients with the rare disease epidermolysis bullosa (EB) were most frequently positive for Staphylococcus aureus (SA), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA), and Streptococcus pyogenes (GAS) — and antibiotic resistance was common — in a retrospective analysis of over 700 wound cultures from 158 patients across the United States and Canada. The findings from the EB Clinical Characterization and Outcomes Database speak to the value of surveillance cultures with routine testing for microbial resistance – including mupirocin resistance — and to the importance of antibiotic stewardship not only for oral antibiotics but for topicals as well, according to Laura E. Levin, MD, and Kimberly D. Morel, MD, of the departments of dermatology and pediatrics, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, the lead and senior authors, respectively, of the paper recently published in Pediatric Dermatology.

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        Rituparna @Madhubani last edited by

        @madhubani Mupirocin-susceptibility testing was performed at only some of the 13 participating centers. Of 15 patients whose cultures had recorded SA mupirocin-susceptibility testing, 11 had cultures positive for mupirocin-susceptible SA and 6 (40%) had mupirocin-resistant SA isolates (2 patients grew both). Of these six patients, half had isolates that were also methicillin-resistant. Mupirocin, a topical antibiotic, has been a cornerstone of decolonization regimens for MSSA and MRSA, but resistance has been demonstrated in other research as well and is not specific to EB, wrote Levin, Morel, and coauthors.

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