Abstract

To investigate the possibility of in vivo development of decreased vancomycin susceptibility, the vancomycin susceptibilities of 12 methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) isolates serially recovered from six patients with vancomycin therapy were tested by standard MIC determination method and population analysis. While all of the MRSA isolates were susceptible to vancomycin (MICs, 1-2 μg/ml) by standard method, population analysis showed the upward shifts indicating decreased vancomycin susceptibility among serial isolates from two patients. These bacteria with decreased vancomycin susceptibility could be selected by using vancomycin selection of pre-therapy isolates under laboratory conditions. Furthermore, the reversion phenomenon of decreased vancomycin susceptibility was confirmed after 20 serial passages of the post-therapy isolates on drug-free agar. These data suggest that in vivo isolates may develop decreased vancomycin susceptibility that is not of such magnitude to cross a breakpoint threshold. This resistance may be unstable, and appears to result from a selective or inducible process that occurs in MRSA clinical strains during vancomycin therapy.

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