TY - JOUR
T1 - Carriage frequency, phenotypic, and genotypic characteristics of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus isolated from dental health-care personnel, patients, and environment
AU - Khairalla, Ahmed S
AU - Wasfi, Reham
AU - Ashour, Hossam M
N1 - Khairalla, A.S., Wasfi, R., & Ashour, H.M. (2017). Carriage frequency, phenotypic, and genotypic characteristics of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus isolated from dental health-care personnel, patients, and environment. Scientific Reports, 7. Article number : 7390. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-07713-8
PY - 2017/1/1
Y1 - 2017/1/1
N2 - There is limited data on methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) carriage in dental clinics. 1300 specimens from patients, health personnel, and environmental surfaces of a dental clinic in Egypt were tested for MRSA. Antibiotic susceptibility, biofilm formation, Staphylococcal protein A ( spa ) typing, SCC mec typing, and PCR-based assays were used to detect mecA , mecC , vanA , Panton-Valentine Leukocidin toxin ( PVL ), and toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 ( tst ) genes. Among 34 mecA -positive MRSA isolates, five (14.7%) were PVL -positive, seventeen (50%) were tst -positive, ten (29.4%) were vanA -positive, while none harboured mecC . MRSA hand carriage rates in patients, nurses, and dentists were 9.8%, 6.6%, and 5%. The respective nasal colonization rates were 11.1%, 6.7%, and 9.7%. 1.3% of the environmental isolates were MRSA-positive. Strong and moderate biofilm-forming isolates represented 23.5% and 29.4% of MRSA isolates. 24 MRSA isolates (70.6%) were multi-resistant and 18 (52.9%) harboured SCC mec IV. Among eight spa types, t223 (26.5%), t267 (23.5%), and t14339 (23.5%) were predominant. We noted an alarming genetic relatedness between 7 (20.6%) MRSA isolates and the epidemic EMRSA-15 clone, as well as a combined occurrence of tst and PVL in 3 (8.8%) isolates. Results suggest high MRSA pathogenicity in dental wards highlighting the need for more efficient surveillance/infection control strategies.
AB - There is limited data on methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) carriage in dental clinics. 1300 specimens from patients, health personnel, and environmental surfaces of a dental clinic in Egypt were tested for MRSA. Antibiotic susceptibility, biofilm formation, Staphylococcal protein A ( spa ) typing, SCC mec typing, and PCR-based assays were used to detect mecA , mecC , vanA , Panton-Valentine Leukocidin toxin ( PVL ), and toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 ( tst ) genes. Among 34 mecA -positive MRSA isolates, five (14.7%) were PVL -positive, seventeen (50%) were tst -positive, ten (29.4%) were vanA -positive, while none harboured mecC . MRSA hand carriage rates in patients, nurses, and dentists were 9.8%, 6.6%, and 5%. The respective nasal colonization rates were 11.1%, 6.7%, and 9.7%. 1.3% of the environmental isolates were MRSA-positive. Strong and moderate biofilm-forming isolates represented 23.5% and 29.4% of MRSA isolates. 24 MRSA isolates (70.6%) were multi-resistant and 18 (52.9%) harboured SCC mec IV. Among eight spa types, t223 (26.5%), t267 (23.5%), and t14339 (23.5%) were predominant. We noted an alarming genetic relatedness between 7 (20.6%) MRSA isolates and the epidemic EMRSA-15 clone, as well as a combined occurrence of tst and PVL in 3 (8.8%) isolates. Results suggest high MRSA pathogenicity in dental wards highlighting the need for more efficient surveillance/infection control strategies.
KW - cassette chromosome recombinase, multiplex pcr strategy, antibiotic resistance, nasal colonization, biofilm formation, blood cultures, MRSA, gene, surfaces
UR - https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/fac_publications/3236
UR - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-07713-8
M3 - Article
JO - Default journal
JF - Default journal
ER -