The National Institute of Communicable Diseases (NICD), Delhi, India, conducts a laboratory-based surveillance of cholera cases referred from the Infectious Disease Hospital, Delhi. The prevalence and antimicrobial susceptibilities of
Vibrio cholerae
O1, O139, and others, isolated from cholera patients for nine years, were analyzed to determine the changing trends in their isolation and drug-resistance patterns. In total, 29,196 stool samples or rectal swabs, collected during April 1992-December 2000, were included in this study. Of these, 13,730 (47%) were positive for
V. cholerae: 11,091 for
V. cholerae O1 (80.7%) and 1,943 (14%) for
V. cholerae O139, and 696 (5%) were non-O1 and non-O139.
V. cholerae O1 was the dominant serotype during 1992-1993, when
V. cholerae O139 emerged as a new serotype but, thereafter, remained low from 1994 to 1999. Phenotypically, re-emerged
V. cholerae O139 in 2000 displayed a difference compared to those that appeared in 1992-1993, in that the current O139 strains were sensitive to co-trimoxazole. Resistance to nalidixic acid and furazolidone was constantly high (100%) among strains of
V. cholerae O1 and O139. All strains of
V. cholerae were uniformly susceptible to chloramphenicol, tetracycline, amikacin, and norfloxacin. Molecular studies revealed different clones of
V. cholerae O1 and O139 prevailing in the country with the re-emergence of
V. cholerae O139 of a different clonality in Delhi in 2000, which is likely to play a critical role in temporal antigenic variation among the serogroups of
V. cholerae.