METICILLIN-RSISTANT Staphylococcus aureus TRANSMISSION AMONG HEALTHCARE WORKERS, PATIENTS AND THE ENVIRONMENT IN A LARGE ACUTE HOSPITAL UNDER NON-OUTBREAK CONDITIONS INVESTIGATED BY WHOLE-GENOME SEQUENCING

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2021Access:
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KINNEVEY PM, KEARNEY A, SHORE AC, EARLS ME, BRENNAN G, POOVELIKUNNEL TT, HUMPHREYS H, COLEMAN DC, METICILLIN-RSISTANT Staphylococcus aureus TRANSMISSION AMONG HEALTHCARE WORKERS, PATIENTS AND THE ENVIRONMENT IN A LARGE ACUTE HOSPITAL UNDER NON-OUTBREAK CONDITIONS INVESTIGATED BY WHOLE-GENOME SEQUENCING, JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL INFECTION, 118, December, 2021, 99 - 107Download Item:

Abstract:
Background: The role of meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) colonization of healthcare workers (HCWs), patients and the hospital environment in MRSA transmission in non-outbreak settings is poorly understood.
Aims: To investigate transmission events (TEs) involving HCWs, patients and the environment under non-outbreak conditions in a hospital with a history of endemic MRSA using whole-genome sequencing (WGS).
Methods: HCW (N = 326) and patient (N = 388) volunteers on nine wards were tested for nasal and oral MRSA colonization over two years. Near-patient environment (N = 1164), high-frequency touch sites (N = 810) and air (N = 445) samples were screened for MRSA. Representative MRSA and clinical isolates were analysed by WGS and core-genome multi-locus sequence typing (cgMLST). Closely related isolates (≤24 allelic differences) were segregated into related isolated groups (RIGs).
Findings: In total, 155 MRSA were recovered: clinical isolates (N = 41), HCWs (N = 22), patients (N = 37), environmental isolates (N = 55). Nine clonal complexes (CCs) were identified among 110/155 MRSA sequenced with 77/110 assigned to CC22. Seventy-nine MRSA segregated into 17 RIGs. Numerous potential TEs were associated with CC22-MRSA (RIGs 1–15), CC45-MRSA (RIG-16) and CC8-MRSA (RIG-17). RIG-1, (the largest RIG) contained 24 ST22-MRSA-IVh from six HCWs, six patients, four clinical and eight environmental samples recovered over 17 months involving 7/9 wards. TEs involving HCW-to-patient, HCW-to-HCW, patient-to-patient and environmental contamination by HCW/patient isolates were evident. HCW, patient, clinical and environmental isolates were identified in four, nine, seven and 13 RIGs, respectively, with 12/13 of these containing isolates closely related to HCW and/or patient isolates.
Conclusions: WGS detected numerous potential hospital MRSA TEs involving HCWs, patients and the environment under non-outbreak conditions.
Sponsor
Grant Number
Health Research Board (HRB)
HRA-POR-2015-1051
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/dcolemanhttp://people.tcd.ie/kinnevp
http://people.tcd.ie/kearnea2
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PUBLISHED21st August 2021; Epub ahead of print
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JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL INFECTION118
December
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MRSA, Non-outbreak conditions, Environmental contamination, MRSA colonization, Whole-genome sequencing, Hospital transmissionSubject (TCD):
Immunology, Inflammation & Infection , Genomes, Genomics , HOSPITAL-ACQUIRED INFECTION , MRSA , MRSA Transmission from healthcare workers to patients , MRSA colonised healthcare workers , MRSA contamination of the hospital environment , MRSA spread , ST22-MRSA-IV , whole-genome sequencingDOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhin.2021.08.020Licences: