Evolving etiology and resistance patterns in bacterial meningitis: A comparative study over two decades

Authors

  • Fatima Khan MD Microbiology Professor, JNMCH, AMU
  • Arsalan Kamaluddin MR
  • Meher Rizvi MD, PhD Microbiology SQU, Oman
  • Asfia Sultan MD Microbiology Assistant Professor, JNMCH, AMU
  • Anees Akhtar MD Microbiology Assistant Professor, JNMCH, AMU
  • Areeb Shahid Rao MBBS Phase III JNMCH, AMU
  • Bhanu Chaudhary Intern JNMCH, AMU

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54029/2025esm

Keywords:

meningitis, antimicrobial resistance, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, MRSA, extended-Spectrum Beta-Lactamase, ESBL, high-level aminoglycosides resistance, HLAR

Abstract

This study examines the evolution of bacterial meningitis etiology and antimicrobial resistance patterns over 20 years at a tertiary care centre in Aligarh, India. Comparing two periods (2001-2009 and 2015-2021), we identified a shift from gram-positive to gram-negative bacteria as the primary pathogens, with Staphylococcus aureus decreasing from 37.7% to 26.6% and Klebsiella pneumoniae increasing from 4.7% to 14.4%. Resistance trends show a significant decline in the effectiveness of antibiotics, particularly macrolides, fluoroquinolones, and cephalosporins. Aminoglycosides retained moderate efficacy, while carbapenem resistance increased from 0% to 56.3%, and Extended-Spectrum Beta-Lactamase (ESBL) production rose from 10% to 22.2%. The study highlights an urgent need for updated treatment protocols and enhanced surveillance to address the rising resistance and evolving pathogen landscape in bacterial meningitis.

Published

2025-04-01

Issue

Section

Original Article