| Literature DB >> 29370836 |
Alexander Kiefer1, Christian Bogdan2, Volker O Melichar3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In individuals with cystic fibrosis (CF), colonization with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) was reported to be associated with a deterioration of pulmonary disease as reflected by an accelerated decline in lung function. Thus, an early eradication of MRSA could be beneficial in these patients. Here, we report on an intensified MRSA eradication protocol.Entities:
Keywords: Cystic fibrosis; Eradication; Methicillin- resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29370836 PMCID: PMC5785857 DOI: 10.1186/s12890-018-0588-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Local measures
| • Hand sanitation (Alcohol-based: Desderman ®, Sterillium®) as often as possible and reasonable | |
| • Application of mupirocin into the nasal atrium: three times daily | |
| • Disinfecting full body wash including the hair using antiseptic solutions (octenidin, polihexanide): once daily | |
| • Rinse of the oropharynx with antiseptic: chlorhexidine, hexetidine or octenidin: three times daily | |
| • Replacement of toothbrush or soaking in chlorhexidine: after use | |
| • Change of underwear, clothes and bedding and disinfecting laundering: once daily | |
| • Disinfection of all surfaces in the room with glucoprotamin 0,5%: once daily |
Clinical data of the patients (at the time of the first MRSA detection)
| Patient no. | Genotype | FEV1% predicted | bacterial colonization (other than MRSA) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | F508del/2721del11 | 76,4% |
|
| Patient 2 | F508del/F508del | 31,3% |
|
| Patient 3 | F508del/Arg334Trp | 72,0% | MSSAa |
| Patient 4 | F508del/F508del | 80,1% | none |
| Patient 5 | F508del/del17 | 51,5% | MSSA, |
| Patient 6 | F508del/F508del | Not possible | none |
| Patient 7 | F508del/F508del | 76,3% | MSSA, |
aMSSA, methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus
Rate of change in FEV1% predicted and time of follow up
| Patient no | Change in FEV1% predicted per year | Time of follow up (months) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | - 0.82 | 59 |
| 2 | −1.26 | 57 |
| 3 | + 0.86 | 28 |
| 5 | - 8.49 | 24 |
| 7 | −0.7 | 17 |
Fig. 1FEV1% predicted in patients who underwent successful eradication of MRSA. In patient 4 MRSA was not eradicated; patient 6 was too young to perform lung function test
Overview on studies that evaluated different antibiotic protocols for the eradication of MRSA after its first detection
| Author | Patients treated | Age of patients (years) | Treatment protocol | Eradication success (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solis et al. [ | 12 | median 9.8 (0,6–17) | 5 days topic/inhaled vancomycin | 58 |
| Macfarlane et al. [ | 17 | mean 12.3 (1.8–16.5) | 1. oral rifampicin and fusidic acid over 5 days | 47% |
| 2. If still positive: oral rifampicin and fusidic acid over additional 5 days | 71% | |||
| 3. If still positive: intravenous teicoplanin | 94% | |||
| Hall et al. [ | 29 | mean 30 (17–62) | either single or dual oral antibiotic therapy, until negative sputum, minimum 2 weeks, maximum 8 weeks | single therapy 50% |
| Kappler et al. [ | 37 | mean 15.3 (0.6–36.9) | 3 weeks dual intravenous + 6 weeks dual oral antibiotics + inhaled vancomycin if still positive 6 weeks inhaled vancomycin | 84 |
| Muhlebach et al. | 22 | mean 12.3 (SD 6.6) | 2 weeks dual oral antibiotics (rifampicin and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole or rifampicin an minocycline) | 82 |
| Muhlebach et al. | 19 | mean 10.5 (SD 5.5) | none | 26 |
| this study | 7 | Median 15 (4–30) | Oral rifampicin and fusidic acid + inhaled vancomycin over 7 days | 86 |