4.5 Article

CA-MRSA and HA-MRSA coexist in community and hospital settings in Uganda

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13756-019-0551-1

Keywords

Eastern Uganda; Iganga; Mayuge districts; Coexistence; Hospital-associated MRSA; Community-associated MRSA; mecA; SCCmec types; spa types

Funding

  1. GlaxoSmithKline (gsk)'s Trust in Science scheme
  2. Carnegie Cooperation (NGAAI&II) through the Directorate of Research and Graduate Training, Makerere University

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BackgroundMethicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) strains were once confined to hospitals however, in the last 20years MRSA infections have emerged in the community in people with no prior exposure to hospitals. Strains causing such infections were novel and referred to as community-associated MRSA (CA-MRSA). The aim of this study was to determine the MRSA carriage rate in children in eastern Uganda, and to investigate coexistence between CA-MRSA and hospital-associated (HA-MRSA).MethodsBetween February and October 2011, nasopharyngeal samples (one per child) from 742 healthy children under 5years in rural eastern Uganda were processed for isolation of MRSA, which was identified based on inhibition zone diameter of 19mm on 30g cefoxitin disk. SCCmec and spa typing were performed for MRSA isolates.ResultsA total of 140S. aureus isolates (18.9%, 140/742) were recovered from the children of which 5.7% (42/742) were MRSA. Almost all (95.2%, 40/42) MRSA isolates were multidrug resistant (MDR). The most prevalent SCCmec elements were types IV (40.5%, 17/42) and I (38.1%, 16/42). The overall frequency of SCCmec types IV and V combined, hence CA-MRSA, was 50% (21/42). Likewise, the overall frequency of SCCmec types I, II and III combined, hence HA-MRSA, was 50% (21/42). Spa types t002, t037, t064, t4353 and t12939 were detected and the most frequent were t064 (19%, 8/42) and t037 (12%, 5/42).ConclusionThe MRSA carriage rate in children in eastern Uganda is high (5.7%) and comparable to estimates for Mulago Hospital in Kampala city. Importantly, HA-MRSA (mainly of spa type t037) and CA-MRSA (mainly of spa type t064) coexist in children in the community in eastern Uganda, and due to high proportion of MDR detected, outpatient treatment of MRSA infection in eastern Uganda might be difficult.

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