Abstract

Staphylococcus aureus is a cause of considerable morbidity and mortality in HIV-seropositive persons. Although methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) is encountered worldwide and in many areas of medical care, little has been reported on clinical infection with MRSA in patients with HIV. We report on an outbreak of MRSA infection in HIV antibody positive patients, using case reports to describe an outbreak of MRSA infection in HIV-seropositive persons. Six cases of clinical MRSA infection were reported over a 4-week period on patients on an HIV dedicated ward. All cases had previous AIDS diagnoses and low CD4 cell counts (median 8 x 10(6)/l; range 0 to 238). Two cases had infected skin lesions and 2 cases had infected indwelling central venous catheters with septicaemia. Two cases had pneumonia, one with concurrent infection at the entry site of a percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) feeding tube. Isolates of MRSA from the 6 cases were compared by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis of Sma1 chromosomal digests. The resultant banding pattern showed the same strain was responsible for all the infections. A seventh inpatient, the index case, had positive carriage with the same strain of MRSA. To define ongoing MRSA carriage after the outbreak, 29 consecutive ward patients were swabbed for MRSA: all were negative. All patients identified with MRSA infection responded to treatment with intravenous teicoplanin, although carriage was unaltered. Four of the 6 cases died within 7 weeks of diagnosis of MRSA. MRSA can cause severe morbidity in patients with end-stage HIV disease. A small outbreak of MRSA was controlled by simple precautionary measures with no subsequent ongoing transmission of MRSA.

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