A variant of the Southern German clone of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus is predominant in Croatia

Microbiology (medical) DNA, Bacterial Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus 0301 basic medicine Genotype Croatia Bacterial Toxins Drug Resistance SCCmec Exotoxins MRSA Microbial Sensitivity Tests Polymerase Chain Reaction 03 medical and health sciences Leukocidins Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial Prevalence Cluster Analysis Humans Cities Croatia; MRSA; PVL; SCCmec; spa typing Molecular Epidemiology Bacterial DNA Staphylococcal Infections DNA Fingerprinting Hospitals spa typing Anti-Bacterial Agents Bacterial Typing Techniques 3. Good health Infectious Diseases PVL Multiple
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-0691.2009.03042.x Publication Date: 2009-09-03T02:22:43Z
ABSTRACT
The aim of the present study was to investigate the antibiotic susceptibility patterns and molecular epidemiology of clinical methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) isolates recovered in 24 hospitals in 20 cities in Croatia from October to December 2004. A total of 1815 consecutive S. aureus isolates were recovered, 248 of which were MRSA. The MRSA isolates were analysed using spa typing, multilocus sequence typing and SCCmec typing. Furthermore, the presence of Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL) genes was determined as a genetic marker for community-associated MRSA. The MRSA prevalence was 14%. Ninety-six per cent of the MRSA isolates were resistant to ciprofloxacin, 95% to clindamycin and azithromycin, 94% to gentamicin, and 93% to erythromycin. The majority of the MRSA isolates (78%) was associated with the ST111-MRSA-I clone. In addition, various other endemic MRSA clones were observed, such as the ST247-MRSA-I (4%), the ST45-MRSA-IV (2%), the ST5-MRSA-I (2%), the ST239-MRSA-III (2%), the ST5-MRSA-II (1%), the ST8-MRSA-IV (1%) and the ST5-MRSA-IV (<1%) clones. Furthermore, we observed one PVL-negative ST80-MRSA-IV isolate. Four PVL-positive MRSA isolates were found, associated with ST8-MRSA-IV, ST80-MRSA-IV and ST80-MRSA-I. The ST111-MRSA-I clone was predominant in Croatia. Future surveillance studies of MRSA are important to elucidate whether changes in the clonal distribution of MRSA will occur, and if the minor endemic MRSA clones observed in the present study will replace the ST111-MRSA-I clone on a large scale.
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