Clinical impact and prevalence of MRSA CC398 and differences between MRSA-TetR and MRSA-TetS in an area of Spain with a high density of pig farming: a prospective cohort study

2017 
Abstract Objectives Tetracycline resistance (Tet R ) is a phenotypic marker of the livestock-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) CC398 clone. The aim of this study was to analyse the prevalence of MRSA CC398 in patients in contact with healthcare facilities and differences between patients with MRSA-Tet R and MRSA tetracycline-susceptible (Tet S ) strains. Methods Patients diagnosed with MRSA from January 2012 to December 2015 were divided into two groups, MRSA-Tet R and MRSA-Tet S . Epidemiologic and clinical data were evaluated. Molecular analysis was performed (multilocus sequence typing, spa typing) on MRSA-Tet R strains. Results Data from 288 MRSA patients were obtained, and 106 (36.8%) carried MRSA-Tet R (93 typed as CC398 (87.7%); the remaining 13 isolates were ascribed to CC9, CC1, CC121, CC30, CC97, CC146 and CC152). The most frequent spa type was t011 (56.6%, 61/106). Detection of MRSA-Tet R increased over the years (21.9%, 16/73, in 2012; 50.7%, 36/71, in 2015; p R patients vs. 83.3% (95/114) in MRSA-Tet S patients (p R patients in nursing homes was lower than in MRSA-Tet S patients (4.7%, 5/106, vs. 27.5%, 50/182, p R as distinct from MRSA-Tet S was associated with workers on pig farms (49.0%, 52/106, vs. 1.0%, 2/182; p Conclusions Prevalence of MRSA-Tet R (especially CC398) at the hospital level in a Spanish region with intensive pig farming activity is high and is responsible for severe infections. Significant differences were detected in clinical and epidemiologic characteristics among MRSA-Tet R and MRSA-Tet S patients.
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