Abstract
The aim of this study was to optimize the epidemiological monitoring of strains of Staphylococcus aureus, a major cause of hospital-acquired infections. From September to December 1998 47 S. aureus strains isolated from swabs taken from orthopaedic and trauma patients were in studied. Thirty-five isolates were sensitive to methicillin (MSSA) and 12 were methicillin-resistant (MRSA). Ten of the 47 isolates could not be phage-typed using the international set of typing phages: five of these isolates were MSSA and five were MRSA. These MRSA isolates, which were also not typeable by the phages currently recommended for phage-typing MRSA, were lysed by locally isolated experimental phages 584 and 1814. Phage 1814 lysed the gentamicin-resistant MRSA and phage 584 acted on the gentamicin-sensitive MRSA. Both new phages were inactive against the methicillin-sensitive isolates. Cloning of certain isolates was confirmed by macrorestriction genomic profiles obtained by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analysis (PFGE). The results showed good discriminatory ability of antibiotic-resistance pattern phenotyping and phage-typing when the phages used were adapted to epidemic-associated MRSA strains.
Published Version
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