New patterns of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) clones, community-associated MRSA genotypes behave like healthcare-associated MRSA genotypes within hospitals, Argentina

被引:63
作者
Egea, Ana L. [1 ,2 ]
Gagetti, Paula [3 ]
Lamberghini, Ricardo [4 ]
Faccone, Diego [3 ]
Lucero, Celeste [3 ]
Vindel, Ana [5 ]
Tosoroni, Dario [6 ]
Garnero, Analia [7 ]
Saka, Hector A. [1 ,2 ]
Galas, Marcelo [3 ]
Bocco, Jose L. [1 ,2 ]
Corso, Alejandra [3 ]
Sola, Claudia [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nacl Cordoba, Fac Ciencias Quim, CONICET, CIBICI, RA-5000 Cordoba, Argentina
[2] Univ Nacl Cordoba, Fac Ciencias Quim, Dept Bioquim Clin, RA-5000 Cordoba, Argentina
[3] Inst Nacl Enfermedades Infecc, ANLIS Dr Carlos G Malbrran, Serv Antimicrobianos, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina
[4] Univ Nacl Cordoba, Hosp Rawson, Fac Ciencias Med, Catedra Infectol 1, RA-5000 Cordoba, Argentina
[5] Inst Salud Carlos III, Ctr Nacl Microbiol, Lab Infecc Nosocomi, Madrid, Spain
[6] Univ Nacl Cordoba, Fac Med, Area Informat Med, RA-5000 Cordoba, Argentina
[7] Hosp Ninos Santisima Trinidad, Serv Infectol, Cordoba, Argentina
关键词
MRSA; ST5; ST30; Community-onset infections; Healtcare-onset infections; Argentina; MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION; NOSOCOMIAL INFECTIONS; CHANGING EPIDEMIOLOGY; GLOBAL EPIDEMIOLOGY; TRANSMISSION; DISSEMINATION; COLONIZATION; EVOLUTION; STRAINS; TRENDS;
D O I
10.1016/j.ijmm.2014.08.002
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 [微生物学];
摘要
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) burden is increasing worldwide in hospitals [healthcare-associated (HA)-MRSA] and in communities [community-associated (CA)-MRSA]. However, the impact of CA-MRSA within hospitals remains limited, particularly in Latin America. A countrywide representative survey of S. aureus infections was performed in Argentina by analyzing 591 clinical isolates from 66 hospitals in a prospective cross-sectional, multicenter study (Nov-2009). This work involved healthcare-onset infections-(HAHO, >48 hospitalization hours) and community-onset (CO) infections [including both, infections (HACO) in patients with healthcare-associated risk-factors (HRFs) and infections (CACO) in those without HRFs]. MRSA strains were genetically typed as CA-MRSA and HA-MRSA genotypes (CA-MRSA(G) and HA-MRSA(G)) by SCCmec- and spa-typing, PFGE, MLST and virulence genes profile by PCR. Considering all isolates, 63% were from CO-infections and 55% were MRSA [39% CA-MRSA(G) and 16% HA-MRSAG]. A significantly higher MRSA proportion among CO- than HAHO-S. aureus infections was detected (58% vs 49%); mainly in children (62% vs 43%). The CA-MRSA(G)/HA-MRSA(G) have accounted for 16%/33% of HAHO-, 39%/13% of HACO- and 60.5%/0% of CACO-infections. Regarding the epidemiological associations identified in multivariate models for patients with healthcare-onset CA-MRSA(G) infections, CA-MRSA(G) behave like HA-MRSAG within hospitals but children were the highest risk group for healthcare-onset CA-MRSAG infections. Most CA-MRSAG belonged to two major clones: PFGE-type N-ST30-SCCmecIVc-t019-PVL+ and PFGE-type I-ST5-IV-SCCmecIVa-t311-PVL+ (45% each). The ST5-IV-PVL+/ST30-IV-PVL+ clones have caused 31%/33% of all infections, 20%/4% of HAHO-, 43%/23% of HACO- and 35%/60% of CACO- infections, with significant differences by age groups (children/adults) and geographical regions. Importantly, an isolate belonging to USA300-0114-(ST8-SCCmecIVa-spat008-PVL+-ACME(+)) was detected for the first time in Argentina. Most of HA-MRSAG (66%) were related to the Cordobes/Chilean clone-(PFGE-type A-ST5-SCCmecl-t149) causing 18% of all infections (47% of HAHO- and 13% of HACO-infections).
引用
收藏
页码:1086 / 1099
页数:14
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