| Literature DB >> 27873637 |
Marina Macedo-Viñas1, John Conly2, Patrice Francois3, Richard Aschbacher4, Dominique S Blanc5, Geoffrey Coombs6, George Daikos7, Benu Dhawan8, Joanna Empel9, Jerome Etienne10, Agnes Marie Sá Figueiredo11, Lizhong Han12, Hong Bin Kim13, Robin Köck14, Anders Larsen15, Franziska Layer16, Janice Lo17, Tadashi Maeda18, Michael Mulvey19, Annalisa Pantosti20, Tomoo Saga18, Jacques Schrenzel3, Andrew Simor21, Robert Skov15, Miranda Van Rijen22, Hui Wang23, Zunita Zakaria24, Stephan Harbarth3.
Abstract
The antibiotic susceptibility and molecular epidemiology of Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL)-positive meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) isolates reported from 17 countries in the Americas, Europe and, Australia-Asia were analysed. Among a total of 3236 non-duplicate isolates, the lowest susceptibility was observed to erythromycin in all regions. Susceptibility to ciprofloxacin showed large variation (25%, 75% and 84% in the Americas, Europe and Australia-Asia, respectively). Two vancomycin-intermediate PVL-positive MRSA isolates were reported, one from Hong Kong and the other from The Netherlands. Resistance to trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole and linezolid was <1%. Among 1798 MRSA isolates from 13 countries that were tested for the requested 10 non-β-lactam antibiotics, 49.4% were multisusceptible. However, multiresistant isolates (resistant to at least three classes of non-β-lactam antibiotics) were reported from all regions. Sequence type 30 (ST30) was reported worldwide, whereas ST80 and ST93 were exclusive to Europe and Australia, respectively. USA300 and related clones (ST8) are progressively replacing the ST80 clone in several European countries. Eight major clusters were discriminated by multilocus variable-number tandem repeat assay (MLVA), showing a certain geographic specificity. PVL-positive MRSA isolates frequently remain multisusceptible to non-β-lactam agents, but multiresistance is already prevalent in all regions. Surveillance of MRSA susceptibility patterns should be monitored to provide clinicians with the most current information regarding changes in resistance patterns. Copyright ÂEntities:
Keywords: Antibiotic multiresistance; Meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus; Molecular epidemiology; Panton–Valentine leukocidin
Year: 2013 PMID: 27873637 DOI: 10.1016/j.jgar.2013.08.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Antimicrob Resist ISSN: 2213-7165 Impact factor: 4.035