Abstract

BackgroundMethicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is an important nosocomial pathogen but little is known about its circulation in hospitals in developing countries. We aimed to describe carriage of S.aureus amongst inpatients in a mid-sized Kenyan government hospital.MethodsWe determined the frequency of S.aureus and MRSA carriage amongst inpatients in Thika Hospital, Kenya by means of repeated cross-sectional ward surveys. For all S.aureus isolates, we performed antibiotic susceptibility tests, genomic profiling using a DNA microarray and spa typing and MLST.ResultsIn this typical mid-sized Kenyan Government hospital, we performed 950 screens for current carriage of S.aureus amongst inpatients over a four month period. We detected S.aureus carriage (either MSSA or MRSA) in 8.9% (85/950; 95%CI 7.1-10.8) of inpatient screens, but patients with multiple screens were more likely have detection of carriage. MRSA carriage was rare amongst S.aureus strains carried by hospital inpatients – only 7.0% (6/86; 95%CI 1.5-12.5%) of all isolates were MRSA. Most MRSA (5/6) were obtained from burns patients with prolonged admissions, who only represented a small proportion of the inpatient population. All MRSA strains were of the same clone (MLST ST239; spa type t037) with concurrent resistance to multiple antibiotic classes. MSSA isolates were diverse and rarely expressed antibiotic resistance except against benzyl-penicillin and co-trimoxazole.ConclusionsAlthough carriage rates for S.aureus and the MRSA prevalence in this Kenyan hospital were both low, burns patient were identified as a high risk group for carriage. The high frequency of genetically indistinguishable isolates suggests that there was local transmission of both MRSA and MSSA.

Highlights

  • Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is an important nosocomial pathogen but little is known about its circulation in hospitals in developing countries

  • We aimed to describe the prevalence and diversity of MSSA and MRSA carriage amongst inpatients in a typical mid-sized public-service hospital in Kenya

  • Carriage of S.aureus A total of 950 screening swabs were obtained from 733 inpatients in the medical, surgical and gynaecological wards of Thika Hospital

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Summary

Introduction

Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is an important nosocomial pathogen but little is known about its circulation in hospitals in developing countries. We aimed to describe carriage of S.aureus amongst inpatients in a mid-sized Kenyan government hospital. Staphylococcus aureus is both a human commensal and an important pathogen [1]. Methicillin-resistant S.aureus (MRSA) is a common cause of healthcare-associated infections in both developed and developing countries, though limited information is available from the latter [2]. In hospital wards in developing countries, the risk of nosocomial transmission is likely to be high due to close physical proximity of patients, inadequate staffing, unreliable water-supply for handwashing, lack of alcohol hand-rub, isolation facilities or expertise for infection. Carriage of S.aureus (either MRSA or methicillin-sensitive S.aureus (MSSA)) often lasts from months to years, and tends to be longer amongst individuals with chronic skin disease [6]

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