Avaliação da disseminação de Staphylococcus aureus resistente a oxacilina em Serviço de Dermatologia do Hospital das Clínicas / Evaluation of the spread of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in the Dermatology ward of Hospital das Clínicas

AUTOR(ES)
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

2008

RESUMO

Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile pathogen capable of causing a wide variety of infections. The proportion of nosocomial and community-acquired methicillinresistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections has increased in the last years. Methicillin resistance is mediated by the mecA gene which is carried on the Staphylococcal Cassette Chromosome mec (SCCmec). In heath care settings, patients who are colonized or infected with MRSA constitute a reservoir and a source of spread of this microorganism, mainly through transiently colonized health care workers (HCWs). MRSA infections are usually preceded by a period of colonization. In 2003, an increase in the rates of MRSA nosocomial infection in the Dermatology ward of Hospital das Clínicas was observed, in comparison with the five previous years. The aims of this study were to evaluate the nosocomial transmission of MRSA in the Dermatology ward and to characterize MRSA isolates obtained from patients and HCWs. Surveillance cultures of the anterior nares and skin lesions were performed to identify patients who were MRSA carriers, during a period of six months. The phenotypic identification was confirmed by multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR), to detect mecA and coa genes. Subsequently, MRSA isolates were submitted to antimicrobial susceptibility testing by microdilution method, multiplex PCR for SCCmec typing and molecular typing by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Forty-five percent of the patients were MRSA carriers. 14% of the HCWs were MRSA carriers at the beginning of the study and 18% at the end. One hundred and five MRSA isolates were obtained, 11 from HCWs and 94 from 64 patients who were MRSA carriers. Sixty-one percent of the patients, classified as MRSA carriers, were positive on the first culture and 39% were identified during the follow up period in the subsequent cultures. The coagulase gene was detected in all 105 isolates and the mecA gene in 101. All MRSA isolates were susceptible to vancomycin and resistant to oxacillin and penicillin. Thirty-three percent of the isolates were multiresistant, presented SCCmec Type IIIA and showed a predominant PFGE type. The SCCmec type IV was found in 59% of the isolates. It was not possible to determine the SCCmec type of four isolates. The B1 PFGE pattern was the most prevalent, presented by MRSA SCCmec type IV isolates, obtained from nine patients and three HCWs. Nosocomial transmission occurred in 39% of the MRSA carriers. It was possible to observe HCWs MRSA cross- transmission in the Dermatology ward. HCWs were transiently colonized. In addition to nosocomial transmission of MRSA, it was possible to detect patients who were MRSA carriers on admission

ASSUNTO(S)

molecular epidemiology nosocomial infection resistência a meticilina staphylococcus aureus epidemiologia molecular infecção hospitalar staphylococcus aureus methicillin-resistance

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