| Literature DB >> 26063853 |
Maria Pardos de la Gandara1, Juan Antonio Raygoza Garay2, Michael Mwangi2, Jonathan N Tobin3, Amanda Tsang4, Chamanara Khalida4, Brianna D'Orazio4, Rhonda G Kost5, Andrea Leinberger-Jabari5, Cameron Coffran5, Teresa H Evering5, Barry S Coller5, Shirish Balachandra6, Tracie Urban6, Claude Parola6, Scott Salvato6, Nancy Jenks7, Daren Wu8, Rhonda Burgess9, Marilyn Chung1, Herminia de Lencastre10, Alexander Tomasz11.
Abstract
In November 2011, The Rockefeller University Center for Clinical and Translational Science (CCTS), the Laboratory of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, and Clinical Directors Network (CDN) launched a research and learning collaborative project with six community health centers in the New York City metropolitan area to determine the nature (clonal type) of community-acquired Staphylococcus aureus strains causing skin and soft tissue infections (SSTIs). Between November 2011 and March 2013, wound and nasal samples from 129 patients with active SSTIs suspicious for S. aureus were collected and characterized by molecular typing techniques. In 63 of 129 patients, the skin wounds were infected by S. aureus: methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) was recovered from 39 wounds and methicillin-sensitive S. aureus (MSSA) was recovered from 24. Most-46 of the 63-wound isolates belonged to the CC8/Panton-Valentine leukocidin-positive (PVL(+)) group of S. aureus clone USA300: 34 of these strains were MRSA and 12 were MSSA. Of the 63 patients with S. aureus infections, 30 were also colonized by S. aureus in the nares: 16 of the colonizing isolates were MRSA, and 14 were MSSA, and the majority of the colonizing isolates belonged to the USA300 clonal group. In most cases (70%), the colonizing isolate belonged to the same clonal type as the strain involved with the infection. In three of the patients, the identity of invasive and colonizing MRSA isolates was further documented by whole-genome sequencing.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26063853 PMCID: PMC4508410 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.00591-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Microbiol ISSN: 0095-1137 Impact factor: 5.948