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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, Dec 1997, 3092-3097, Vol 35, No. 12
A Tambic, EG Power, H Talsania, RM Anthony and GL French
A cluster of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections
among patients on an intensive care unit (ICU) was detected by routine
infection control surveillance. In the period from 5 January to 22 June
1995, 10 patients on the ICU and a further 6 patients (5 on one ward that
had received colonized patients transferred from the ICU) were affected by
MRSA strains with the same antibiotic susceptibility patterns. Seven (44%)
of these 16 colonized patients developed MRSA bacteremia. MRSA isolates
with the same characteristics were also found on the hands of one member of
the ICU staff. The isolates were untypeable by phage typing, but 15 of 17
outbreak strains analyzed genetically had identical randomly amplified
polymorphic DNA (RAPD) and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE)
profiles. A single strain of MRSA that was nontypeable by phage typing and
that was isolated on the ICU on 1 January and six nontypeable and
epidemiologically unrelated MRSA isolates all had RAPD profiles distinct
from that of the outbreak strain. Implementation of strict infection
control measures stopped the further spread of MRSA on the ICU, the
affected general ward, and seven other wards that received MRSA carriers
from the ICU. Although nontypeable by phage typing and not previously
recognized as an epidemic strain, this strain of MRSA was readily
transmissible and highly virulent. RAPD typing was found to be a simple,
rapid, and effective method for the epidemiological investigation of this
outbreak, and performance of typing by this method was simpler and less
time-consuming than that of typing by PFGE. RAPD typing may have more
general application for the study of S. aureus infections in hospitals.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Analysis of an outbreak of non-phage-typeable methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus by using a randomly amplified polymorphic DNA assay [In Process Citation]
Department of Microbiology, UMDS of Guy's and St. Thomas's Hospitals, London, United Kingdom.
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