Affiliation:
1. National Laboratory for Health, Environment and Food, Department of Clinical Microbiology, Prvomajska 1, 2000 Maribor, Slovenia
Abstract
Abstract
Introduction
The identification of patients infected and/or colonised by methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is necessary for the timely introduction of measures for infection control. We compared the diagnostic efficacy of combinations of MRSA surveillance swabs routinely taken by health institutions in the country.
Methods
All surveillance samples, which were sent for a microbiological analysis to detect MRSA with the culture method in 2014, in the three departments for medical microbiology of the National Laboratory for Health, Environment and Food, were included in this study.
Results
Among 65,251 surveillance cultures from 13,274 persons, 1,233 (2.1%) were positive (490 positive persons). Prevailing positive surveillance cultures were throat swabs (31.3%), followed by nose swab (31.2%), skin swab (18.9%), perineum (16.4%) and wound swabs (1.4%). The contribution of other samples, such as aspirate, urine and excreta, was under 1%. We found no statistically significant differences in the frequency of detection of a positive patient, if the combination of samples NTS (nose, throat, skin) or NTP (nose, throat, perineum) was analysed. However, statistically significant differences were confirmed when any of the anatomic sites would be omitted from the sets of NTP and NTS (chi square; p<0.01). Adding additional samples resulted in only 24 additional positive patients (4.9%).
Conclusions
The results indicate that increasing the number of surveillance cultures above three does not add much to the sensitivity of MRSA surveillance, the exception could be wound. The swabs from the perineum and from the skin are exchangeable.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Reference22 articles.
1. Boyce JM. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in hospitals and long -term care facilities: microbiology, epidemiology, and preventive measures. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 1992; 13: 725–37.
2. Lauderdale TLY, Wang JT, Lee WS, Huang JH, McDonald LC, Huang IW, et al. Carriage rates of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) depend on anatomic location, the number of sites cultured, culture methods, and the distribution of clonotypes. Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis 2010; 29: 1553-9.
3. Cursino MA, Garcia CP, Lobo RD, Salomao MC, Gobara S, Raymundo GF, et al. Performance of surveillance cultures at different body sites to identify asymptomatic Staphylococcus aureus carriers. Diag Microbiol Infect Dis 2012; 74: 343-8.
4. CLSI. Performance Standards for Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing; Eighteenth Informational Supplement. CLSI document M100-S20. Wayne, PA : Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute, 2010.
5. EUCAST. Available May 16, 2016 from: http://www.eucast.org/.