Transmission of group B streptococci. Traced by use of multiple epidemiologic markers
J. D. Band, H. W. Clegg 2nd, P. S. Hayes, R. R. Facklam, J. Stringer and R. E. Dixon
During a three-week period, septicemia caused by group B Streptococcus,
serotype III, developed in four infants born at a community hospital. The
first infant had early-onset disease; late-onset disease that appeared,
from epidemiologic data, to be nosocomial developed in the other three
infants. Bacteriophage typing and antimicrobial susceptibility testing
confirmed the relatedness of the isolates. A prospective study designed to
differentiate between vertical and nosocomial transmission of group B
Streptococcus showed that of 82 infants, 21 (26%) were culture-positive
during their hospitalization, and nine of these infants (43%) had been
culture-negative at birth. Although serotype III strains were recovered
from four of nine infants with apparently nosocomial acquisition, none of
the isolates displayed an antibiogram or bacteriophage type similar to that
of the isolates involved in the recent cluster. Bacteriophage typing and
antimicrobial susceptibility testing in addition to the use of serotyping
may be helpful in epidemiologic studies of group B Streptococcus.