| Literature DB >> 22682025 |
Mario Giuffrè1, Domenico Cipolla, Celestino Bonura, Daniela Maria Geraci, Aurora Aleo, Stefania Di Noto, Federica Nociforo, Giovanni Corsello, Caterina Mammina.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) has recently emerged as an important pathogen in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs). The purposes of this study were to characterize methicillin-resistant isolates from an outbreak in a NICU, to examine the genetic traits and clonality of CA-MRSA, and to review the characteristics and outcomes of the neonatal cases and investigate the routes of entry and transmission of the MRSA outbreak strain in the NICU under study.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22682025 PMCID: PMC3407518 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2431-12-64
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Characteristics of infants colonized with ST1-MRSA-IVa in an NICU in Palermo, Italy, 2011
| 1 | F | March 28 | April 3 | outborn | 28 | 760 | CS | surgery | 45 | May 5 | CVC, ET, nCPAP, TPN | discharged |
| 22 | M | February 19 | April 4 | outborn | 29 | 960 | CS | surgery | 35 | April 5 | CVC, ET, nCPAP | discharged |
| 3 | F | May 9 | May 9 | outborn | 35 | 2240 | CS | respiratory distress | 19 | May 10 | CVC | discharged |
| 4 | F | May 16 | May 16 | inborn | 39 | 2770 | CS | malformation | 41 | June 14 | CVC, ET | died |
| 5 | F | May 4 | May 17 | outborn | 37 | 2660 | VD | malformation | 793 | June 28 | CVC, ET, nCPAP | discharged |
| 6 | M | May 17 | May 17 | inborn | 30 | 1420 | CS | preterm care | 42 | May 24 | CVC, nCPAP | discharged |
| 7 | F | June 6 | June 6 | inborn | 39 | 3090 | VD | malformation | 49 | July 12 | CVC | discharged |
| 8 | F | June 11 | June 11 | outborn | 27 | 870 | CS | preterm care | 62 | June 28 | CVC, ET, nCPAP, TPN | discharged |
| 9 | F | June 12 | June 13 | outborn | 30 | 1450 | CS | preterm care | 41 | July 5 | CVC, ET, nCPAP | discharged |
| 10 | M | June 19 | June 19 | inborn | 36 | 2380 | CS | respiratory distress | 12 | June 28 | none | discharged |
| 11 | F | June 22 | June 22 | inborn | 33 | 1360 | CS19 | malformation | 26 | July 12 | CVC, ET, nCPAP, TPN | died |
| 12 | F | July 7 | July 7 | outborn | 37 | 1760 | CS | malformation | 22 | July 12 | none | discharged |
| 13 | F | July 13 | July 13 | inborn | 39 | 4220 | CS | respiratory distress | 7 | July 19 | none | discharged |
| 14 | M | July 17 | July 18 | inborn | 42 | 1980 | VD | respiratory distress | 14 | July 19 | none | discharged |
CS = caesarian section, VD = vaginal delivery, CVC = central venous catheter, ET = endotracheal tube, nCPAP = nasal continuous positive airway pressure, TPN = total parenteral nutrition.
weekly screening.
index case.
transferred to a cardiac surgery ward after 69 days of NICU stay and re-admitted after 6 days
Figure 1Multilocus variable number tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) of some representative isolates of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) identified during the outbreak period in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) under study. Lanes: 1 and 10, 500-bp DNA ladder; 2, 4, 5 and 8, ST22-MRSA-IVa isolates; 3,6,7 and 9, ST1-MRSA-IVa isolates.
Figure 2Epidemic curve of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)positive cases during the outbreak period. Curve shows the number of infants whose nasal swabs tested positive for ST1-MRSA-IVa and ST22-MRSA-IVa and the number of hospitalized infants by week.
Figure 3Time course of hospitalization and onset of ST1-MRSA-IVa colonization, as assessed by the weekly surveillance screening program, during the outbreak at the NICU under study.