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Item P-1502. Clindamycin and Group A Streptococcus: Is It Time To Say Goodbye?(Oxford University Press, 2025-01-29) Mann, Keeret; Zijoo, Ritika; Lugar, Richard G.; Graduate Medical Education, School of MedicineBackground: Group A streptococci (GAS) can cause invasive disease leading to Toxic Shock Syndrome (TSS), a condition linked with high mortality. Initial antibiotic therapy for GAS-TSS includes beta-lactams and clindamycin. When clindamycin resistance is noted, linezolid may be used instead until clinical stability is achieved. We reviewed GAS susceptibility at IUH Ball Memorial Hospital to assess appropriateness of initial clindamycin use as adjunctive therapy for GAS-TSS. Methods: GAS positive cultures recovered from 1/1/23 – 12/31/23 at IU Health Ball Memorial Hospital, Muncie, IN were reviewed. Results: Out of 162 cultures positive for GAS, 29 (17.9%) had susceptibility results. All 29 GAS specimens were sensitive to penicillin and linezolid, but only 16/29 (55.2%) specimens were sensitive to clindamycin. Table 1. and Chart 1. show susceptibility results for penicillin, clindamycin, erythromycin, and linezolid. Table 2. shows number of specimens with inducible clindamycin resistance. Chart 2. shows various sources of culture specimens. Conclusion: GAS susceptibility testing was performed with invasive infections or when requested. Significant resistance was noted to clindamycin. Although our data is limited by a small sample size, it is in line with trends noted by US CDC’s Active Bacterial Core surveillance reports. This raises concern over initial use of clindamycin for TSS before susceptibilities are available. There are both advantages and disadvantages associated with use of clindamycin or linezolid. There is more data to support clindamycin use, however it is linked with increased risk of C. difficile infections. There is limited data for the use of linezolid for this indication, but it does maintain better susceptibility and negates the use of vancomycin at time of empiric therapy. Even though more data may be needed to definitively recommend linezolid over clindamycin or vice versa, clinical decisions will need to be made prior to susceptibility results. We recommend clinicians utilize their local antibiograms to guide decision making, while also accounting for patient factors. This also provides an opportunity for the development of clinical practice guidelines to better assist clinicians in the community.Item Phenazopyridine-Induced Methemoglobinemia in a Jehovah's Witness Treated with High-Dose Ascorbic Acid Due to Methylene Blue Contradictions: A Case Report and Review of the Literature(MDPI, 2023-05-24) Menakuru, Sasmith R.; Dhillon, Vijaypal S.; Atta, Mona; Mann, Keeret; Salih, Ahmed; Medicine, School of MedicineMethemoglobinemia is an acute medical emergency that requires prompt correction. Physicians should have a high degree of suspicion of methemoglobinemia in cases that present with hypoxemia that does not resolve with supplemental oxygenation, and they should confirm this suspicion with a positive methemoglobin concentration on arterial blood gas. There are multiple medications that can induce methemoglobinemia, such as local anesthetics, antimalarials, and dapsone. Phenazopyridine is an azo dye used over-the-counter as a urinary analgesic for women with urinary tract infections, and it has also been implicated in causing methemoglobinemia. The preferred treatment of methemoglobinemia is methylene blue, but its use is contraindicated for patients with glucose-6-phosphatase deficiency or those who take serotonergic drugs. Alternative treatments include high-dose ascorbic acid, exchange transfusion therapy, and hyperbaric oxygenation. The authors report a case of a 39-year-old female who took phenazopyridine for 2 weeks to treat dysuria from a urinary tract infection and subsequently developed methemoglobinemia. The patient had contraindications for the use of methylene blue and was therefore treated with high-dose ascorbic acid. The authors hope that this interesting case promotes further research into the utilization of high-dose ascorbic acid for managing methemoglobinemia in patients who are unable to receive methylene blue.