Journal
INFECTION CONTROL AND HOSPITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 6, Pages 685-691Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/ice.2016.41
Keywords
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Funding
- Veterans Affairs Merit Award
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [R01CI000369]
- University of Maryland General Clinical Research Center [M01RR16500]
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OBJECTIVE. To define how often methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is spread from resident to resident in long-term care facilities using whole-genome sequencing. DESIGN. Prospective cohort study. SETTING. A long-term care facility. PARTICIPANTS. Elderly residents in a long-term care facility. METHODS. Cultures for MRSA were obtained weekly from multiple body sites from residents with known MRSA colonization over 12-week study periods. Simultaneously, cultures to detect MRSA acquisition were obtained weekly from 2 body sites in residents without known MRSA colonization. During the first 12-week cycle on a single unit, we sequenced 8 MRSA isolates per swab for 2 body sites from each of 6 residents. During the second 12-week cycle, we sequenced 30 MRSA isolates from 13 residents with known MRSA colonization and 3 residents who had acquired MRSA colonization. RESULTS. MRSA isolates from the same swab showed little genetic variation between isolates with the exception of isolates from wounds. The genetic variation of isolates between body sites on an individual was greater than that within a single body site with the exception of 1 sample, which had 2 unrelated strains among the 8 isolates. In the second cycle, 10 of 16 residents colonized with MRSA (63%) shared 1 of 3 closely related strains. Of the 3 residents with newly acquired MRSA, 2 residents harbored isolates that were members of these clusters. CONCLUSIONS. Point prevalence surveys with whole-genome sequencing of MRSA isolates may detect resident-to-resident transmission more accurately than routine surveillance cultures for MRSA in long-term care facilities.
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