Antibiotics (Basel). 2025 Apr 16;14(4):410. doi: 10.3390/antibiotics14040410.
ABSTRACT
Background: Antimicrobial therapies used for treating group B streptococcus (GBS) early-onset sepsis (EOS) provide insight into clinicians’ adherence to antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) guidelines. Methods: We reviewed antimicrobial therapies given to treat newborns with GBS-EOS. Data were obtained from an Italian surveillance network (including 35 birthing centers) and were prospectively collected from 1 January 2003 to 31 December 2024. Empiric and definitive therapies were classified as adequate and inadequate. Results: There were 967,054 live births and 200 cases of GBS-EOS, of which 43 (21.5%) were preterm and 157 (78.5%) were full-term; 35 (17.5%) out of 200 showed no signs of illness. Fourteen (7.0%) died (one full-term and thirteen preterm newborns under 34 weeks of gestation). Based on the available information, antibiotics were adequate in 106/137 (77.4%) empiric and 48/119 (40.3%) definitive therapies. The duration of antibiotic courses did not differ between severe (median 10 days, IQR 8.0-14.0) and non-severe cases (median: 10 days; IQR: 10.0-12.5; p = 0.68). Antibiotic treatments lasted ≥ 15 days in 34 (20.1%) out of 169 cases with available information. Conclusions: In this large Italian multicenter study, deviations from international recommendations in antimicrobial therapies for GBS-EOS were critical. Our findings underscore the importance of timely antimicrobial de-escalation and the need to avoid excessively prolonged courses of antimicrobials.
PMID:40298582 | DOI:10.3390/antibiotics14040410