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Antimicrobial resistance phenotypes and genotypes of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus CC398 isolates from Spanish hospitals
Ist Teil von
International journal of antimicrobial agents, 2020-04, Vol.55 (4), p.105907-105907, Article 105907
Ort / Verlag
Netherlands: Elsevier B.V
Erscheinungsjahr
2020
Quelle
MEDLINE
Beschreibungen/Notizen
•A multidrug-resistant phenotype was present in 79% of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) CC398 strains.•Almost 20% of strains were resistant to six or more antimicrobial families.•The tetM gene was present in all tetracycline-resistant MRSA CC398 strains.•Resistance to ciprofloxacin (67%), erythromycin/clindamycin (48%) or gentamycin/tobramycin (21%) was common.•Detection of ERYS-CLIR strains was frequent, with linA, linB, lsaB and vgaA genes.
Livestock-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (LA-MRSA) of lineage CC398 is an emerging clone causing human infections but is mostly found in pigs. The aim of this study was to characterize the antimicrobial resistance phenotypes/genotypes of a collection of 137 MRSA CC398 isolates obtained in a previous study from 17 Spanish hospitals, using tetracycline resistance as marker for selection. A multidrug-resistant (MDR) phenotype was present in 79% of analysed isolates, with 17% of them resistant to at least six different antimicrobial families. All tetracycline-resistant isolates (n=137) carried the tetM gene and 75% also carried the tetK gene. Almost 50% of MRSA CC398 isolates showed macrolide and/or lincosamide resistance: a) 39% of isolates were ERYR-CLIR (all with constitutive phenotype), with 87% of them carrying the ermC gene, followed by msrA (25%), ermB (21%), vgaA (17%), ermA (6%), lsaB (4%), linA (2%), linB (2%), and ermT (2%, this isolate with the new spa-type t18071); and b) 9% of MRSA CC398 isolates showed the dissociated ERYS-CLIR phenotype carrying the linA, linB, lsaB and vgaA genes. Other antimicrobial resistance phenotypes in these MRSA CC398 isolates included resistance to ciprofloxacin (67%), aminoglycosides (21%), mupirocin (6%), chloramphenicol (4%) or fusidic acid (2%). The more common resistance genes detected for some of these antimicrobials were: aac(6’)-Ie-aph(2’’)-Ia (16%) and ant(4’)-Ia (12%) for aminoglycosides, and fexA (3%) for chloramphenicol. The high rate of MDR phenotypes with a wide range of antimicrobial resistance genes shown in this study reduce the potential therapeutic options in case of infections.