| Literature DB >> 29185859 |
Dafne Bongiorno1, Gino Mongelli1, Stefania Stefani1, Floriana Campanile1.
Abstract
Rifampicin is one of the major drugs used on its own and also in combination to treat numerous infections sustained by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). In Italy, rifampicin resistance (RIF-R) is increasing in multidrug-resistant-MRSA isolates (16.4%), with respect to Europe (5.7%). In our study, the relationship between clones, rpoB mutations, and susceptibility profiles in 50 RIF-R MRSA isolated from hospitalized patients was evaluated. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing was performed by the broth microdilution method. Isolates were typed by MLST/SCCmec/spa-typing. The rpoB gene was analyzed by PCR and sequence analysis. RIF-R isolates were 60% heterogeneous vancomycin-intermediate S. aureus (hVISA) and 22% daptomycin nonsusceptible and belonged to the major MRSA clones: ST228-SCCmec I (44%), ST8-SCCmec IV (18%), ST239-SCCmec III (16%), ST5-SCCmec II (14%), and ST22-SCCmec IVh (4%). Thirteen diverse RpoB amino acid substitutions were identified. Half of the strains harbored the H481N substitution, conferring low-level resistance. Different single mutations at the equivalent locus (H481D; H481Y) or in other loci, and multiple mutations conferred high-level resistance. In conclusion, this study investigated the nature of RIF-R in Italy among RIF-R-MRSA strains, finding a prevalence of ST228, strongly associated with reduced susceptibility to glycopeptides (hVISA). The spread of RIF-R strains in clinical settings represents a serious threat, due to their complex resistance nature even to new anti-Gram-positive drugs, making these infections particularly difficult to treat.Entities:
Keywords: DNS phenotypes; RIF-R-MRSA clones; hVISA; rifampicin resistance; rpoB
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29185859 DOI: 10.1089/mdr.2017.0299
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Drug Resist ISSN: 1076-6294 Impact factor: 3.431