Abstract

SummaryBackgroundStaphylococcus aureus nasal carriage increases infection risk. However, few studies have investigated S. aureus acquisition/loss over >1 year, and fewer still used molecular typing.Methods1123 adults attending five Oxfordshire general practices had nasal swabs taken. 571 were re-swabbed after one month then every two months for median two years. All S. aureus isolates were spa-typed. Risk factors were collected from interviews and medical records.Results32% carried S. aureus at recruitment (<1% MRSA). Rates of spa-type acquisition were similar in participants S. aureus positive (1.4%/month) and negative (1.8%/month, P = 0.13) at recruitment. Rates were faster in those carrying clonal complex (CC)15 (adjusted (a)P = 0.03) or CC8 (including USA300) (aP = 0.001) at recruitment versus other CCs. 157/274 (57%) participants S. aureus positive at recruitment returning ≥12 swabs carried S. aureus consistently, of whom 135 carried the same spa-type. CC22 (including EMRSA-15) was more prevalent in long-term than intermittent spa-type carriers (aP = 0.03). Antibiotics transiently reduced carriage, but no other modifiable risk factors were found.ConclusionsBoth transient and longer-term carriage exist; however, the approximately constant rates of S. aureus gain and loss suggest that ‘never’ or truly ‘persistent’ carriage are rare. Long-term carriage varies by strain, offering new explanations for the success of certain S. aureus clones.

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