RESUMEN
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to determine the impact of two resolutions to restrict antibiotic use (RDCs no. 44/2010 and 20/2011) in the Campinas metropolitan area (Sao Paulo, Brazil) on antibiotic consumption, resistance rates, and trends in Escherichia coli-causing community-acquired urinary tract infection (UTI). METHODS: The annual retail sale information of antibiotics from drugstores in the Campinas metropolitan area between 2008 and 2012 were obtained through the Intercontinental Medical Statistics Health of Brazil. The daily-defined dose (DDD)/1000 inhabitants/day was calculated from these data to measure consumption. To examine resistance rates, we performed an observational retrospective study in a Campinas teaching hospital, where urinary cultures from outpatients with a clinical suspicion of UTI between October 2009 and September 2015 were analyzed. RESULTS: We observed an increase in rates of antibiotic sales from 2008 to 2011 (cephalosporin: 216.8%, quinolones: 170.9%, aminopenicillins: 140.9%), followed by a decrease in sales in 2012 (cephalosporin: 19.4%, quinolones: 12.7%, aminopenicillins: 11.1%). Sale of nitrofurans, however, did not significantly change during this period. In the retrospective analysis, we observed a significant increasing trend of E. coli resistance for all antibiotic classes, except nitrofurans and folate pathway inhibitors. CONCLUSIONS: We found changes in antibiotic consumption, with an initial increase, followed by a decrease in sales after implementation of the resolutions. However, bacterial resistance does not appear to be affected by the RDCs.