38 results on '"Angela Kearns"'
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2. Toxic Shock Syndrome Toxin 1 Evaluation and Antibiotic Impact in a Transgenic Model of Staphylococcal Soft Tissue Infection
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Hema Sharma, Claire E. Turner, Matthew K. Siggins, Mona El-Bahrawy, Bruno Pichon, Angela Kearns, and Shiranee Sriskandan
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antibiotics ,dissemination ,HLA-DQ8 ,nonmenstrual toxic shock syndrome ,Staphylococcus aureus ,TSST-1 ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Nonmenstrual toxic shock syndrome (nmTSS), linked to TSST-1-producing CC30 Staphylococcus aureus, is the leading manifestation of toxic shock syndrome (TSS). Due to case rarity and a lack of tractable animal models, TSS pathogenesis is poorly understood. We developed an S. aureus abscess model in HLA class II transgenic mice to investigate pathogenesis and treatment. TSST-1 sensitivity was established using murine spleen cell proliferation assays and cytokine assays following TSST-1 injection in vivo. HLA-DQ8 mice were infected subcutaneously with a tst-positive CC30 methicillin-sensitive S. aureus clinical TSS-associated isolate. Mice received intraperitoneal flucloxacillin, clindamycin, flucloxacillin and clindamycin, or a control reagent. Abscess size, bacterial counts, TSST-1 expression, and TSST-1 bioactivity were measured in tissues. Antibiotic effects were compared with the effects of control reagent. Purified TSST-1 expanded HLA-DQ8 T-cell Vβ subsets 3 and 13 in vitro and instigated cytokine release in vivo, confirming TSST-1 sensitivity. TSST-1 was detected in abscesses (0 to 8.0 μg/ml) and draining lymph nodes (0 to 0.2 μg/ml) of infected mice. Interleukin 6 (IL-6), gamma interferon (IFN-γ), KC (CXCL1), and MCP-1 were consistent markers of inflammation during infection. Clindamycin-containing antibiotic regimens reduced abscess size and TSST-1 production. Infection led to detectable TSST-1 in soft tissues, and TSST-1 was detected in draining lymph nodes, events which may be pivotal to TSS pathogenesis. The reduction in TSST-1 production and lesion size after a single dose of clindamycin underscores a potential role for adjunctive clindamycin at the start of treatment of patients suspected of having TSS to alter disease progression. IMPORTANCE Staphylococcal toxic shock syndrome (TSS) is a life-threatening illness causing fever, rash, and shock, attributed to toxins produced by the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus, mainly toxic shock syndrome toxin 1 (TSST-1). TSS was in the past commonly linked with menstruation and high-absorbency tampons; now, TSS is more frequently triggered by other staphylococcal infections, particularly of skin and soft tissue. Investigating the progress and treatment of TSS in patients is challenging, as TSS is rare; animal models do not mimic TSS adequately, as toxins interact best with human immune cells. We developed a new model of staphylococcal soft tissue infection in mice producing human immune cell proteins, rendering them TSST-1 sensitive, to investigate TSS. The significance of our research was that TSST-1 was found in soft tissues and immune organs of mice and that early treatment of mice with the antibiotic clindamycin altered TSST-1 production. Therefore, the early treatment of patients suspected of having TSS with clindamycin may influence their response to treatment.
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- 2019
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3. Circulation of a community healthcare-associated multiply-resistant meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus lineage in South Yorkshire identified by whole genome sequencing
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Angela Kearns, Bruno Pichon, N. Arunachalam, E. Batten, G.J. Hughes, R. Townsend, M. Denton, A. Kerrane, K.N. Agwuh, and L. Utsi
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Male ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Microbiology (medical) ,District nurse ,medicine.medical_specialty ,030501 epidemiology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Disease cluster ,03 medical and health sciences ,Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,medicine ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Community Health Services ,Prospective Studies ,Phylogeny ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cross Infection ,Molecular Epidemiology ,0303 health sciences ,Whole Genome Sequencing ,biology ,030306 microbiology ,Transmission (medicine) ,business.industry ,Public health ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular Typing ,Infectious Diseases ,Tanzania ,England ,Specimen collection ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Wound Infection ,Female ,Staphylococcal Skin Infections ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
Summary Background A cluster of seven cases of skin and wound infections caused by a multiply resistant meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) were detected in a small-town community in South Yorkshire. Initial microbiological investigations showed that all isolates belonged to a spa type observed rarely in England (t1476). Aim To describe the epidemiology of t1476 MRSA in South Yorkshire. Methods Retrospective and prospective case ascertainment was promoted through communication with local microbiology laboratories. Public health investigation included a detailed review of clinical notes for a subset of nine cases. Genomic and phylogenetic analysis was undertaken on t1476 MRSA. Findings Thirty-two cases of t1476 MRSA infection or colonization were identified between December 2014 and February 2018. Cases were older adults (aged 50–98 years). Healthcare exposures for a subset of nine cases indicated frequent contact with a team of district nurses, with all but one case receiving treatment on the same day as another case prior to their own diagnosis. No cases were admitted to hospital at the time of specimen collection. Despite detailed investigations, no carriers were detected among district nursing staff. A long-term carrier/super-shedder was not found. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that t1476 MRSA cases from South Yorkshire were monophyletic and distant from both MRSA of the same lineage from elsewhere in the UK (N = 15) and from publicly available sequences from Tanzania. Conclusion Genomic and epidemiological analyses indicate community-based transmission of a multiply resistant MRSA clone within South Yorkshire introduced around 2012–2013, prior to the detection of a spatial–temporal cluster associated with a distinct risk group. Surveillance data indicate continued circulation.
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- 2019
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4. Tracking Staphylococcus aureus in the intensive care unit using whole-genome sequencing
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C.E. Adams, J. Smith, Stephanie J. Dancer, D. Morrison, Bruno Pichon, and Angela Kearns
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Microbiology (medical) ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,medicine.disease_cause ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,law.invention ,law ,Hygiene ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,Environmental Microbiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Pathogen ,media_common ,Whole genome sequencing ,Cross Infection ,Molecular Epidemiology ,Whole Genome Sequencing ,Transmission (medicine) ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Staphylococcal Infections ,Hand ,Intensive care unit ,Molecular Typing ,Intensive Care Units ,Infectious Diseases ,business - Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus remains an important bacterial pathogen worldwide. This study utilized known staphylococcal epidemiology to track S. aureus between different ecological reservoirs in one 10-bed intensive care unit (ICU).Selected hand-touch surfaces, staff hands and air were screened systematically 10 times during 10 months, with patients screened throughout the study. S. aureus isolates were subjected to spa typing and epidemiological analyses, followed by whole-genome sequencing to provide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data.Multiple transmission pathways between patients and reservoirs were investigated. There were 34 transmission events, of which 29 were highly related (25 SNPs) and five were possibly related (50 SNPs). Twenty (59%) transmission events occurred between colonized patients and their own body sites (i.e. autogenous spread); four (12%) were associated with cross-transmission between patients; four (12%) occurred between patients and hand-touch sites (bedrails and intravenous pump); four (12%) linked airborne S. aureus with staff hands and bedrail; and two (6%) linked bed tables, bedrail and cardiac monitor.Colonized patients are responsible for repeated introduction of new S. aureus into the ICU, whereupon a proportion spread to hand-touch sites in (or near) the patient zone. This short-term reservoir for S. aureus imposes a colonization/infection risk for subsequent patients. More than half of ICU-acquired S. aureus infection originated from the patients' own flora, while staff hands and air were rarely implicated in onward transmission. Control of staphylococcal infection in the ICU is best served by patient screening, systematic cleaning of hand-touch surfaces and continued emphasis on hand hygiene.
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- 2019
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5. Global Epidemiology and Evolutionary History of Staphylococcus aureus ST45
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Bruno Pichon, N. Effelsberg, Christopher D. Heaney, Alexander Mellmann, O. Altinok, Geoffrey W. Coombs, Pranay R. Randad, Frieder Schaumburg, Marc Stegger, Stefan Bletz, Angela Kearns, and L. Peitzmann
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0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Epidemiology ,Lineage (evolution) ,030106 microbiology ,Population ,Virulence ,Biology ,Coalescent theory ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phylogenetics ,Humans ,education ,Phylogeny ,Whole genome sequencing ,education.field_of_study ,Phylogenetic tree ,SCCmec ,Australia ,Bayes Theorem ,Staphylococcal Infections ,Europe ,030104 developmental biology ,Evolutionary biology - Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus ST45 is a major global MRSA lineage with huge strain diversity and a high clinical impact. It is one of the most prevalent carrier lineages but also frequently causes severe invasive disease, such as bacteremia. Little is known about its evolutionary history. In this study, we used whole-genome sequencing to analyze a large collection of 451 diverse ST45 isolates from 6 continents and 26 countries. De novo-assembled genomes were used to understand genomic plasticity and to perform coalescent analyses. The ST45 population contained two distinct sublineages, which correlated with the isolates’ geographical origins. One sublineage primarily consisted of European/North American isolates, while the second sublineage primarily consisted of African and Australian isolates. Bayesian analysis predicted ST45 originated in northwestern Europe about 500 years ago. Isolation time, host, and clinical symptoms did not correlate with phylogenetic groups. Our phylogenetic analyses suggest multiple acquisitions of the SCCmec element and key virulence factors throughout the evolution of the ST45 lineage.
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- 2020
6. European external quality assessments for identification, molecular typing and characterization of Staphylococcus aureus
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Franziska Layer, Christiane Wolz, Berit Schulte, Henrik Westh, Frédéric Laurent, Ruud R.H. Deurenberg, Jesper Larsen, Angela Kearns, Anne Tristan, Nuno A. Faria, François Vandenesch, Anders Rhod Larsen, Hermínia de Lencastre, Joanna Empel, Gráinne I. Brennan, Artur J. Sabat, Iris Spiliopoulou, Waleria Hryniewicz, Magali Dodémont, Ariane Deplano, Heidi Gumpert, Irina Codita, Olivier Denis, Alexander W. Friedrich, Bruno Pichon, and Microbes in Health and Disease (MHD)
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DNA, Bacterial ,0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Genotype ,Quality Assurance, Health Care ,Concordance ,030106 microbiology ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,medicine.disease_cause ,Staphylococcal infections ,03 medical and health sciences ,Antibiotic resistance ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Oxacillin ,Pharmacology ,biology ,business.industry ,Staphylococcal Infections ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Bacterial Typing Techniques ,Staphylococcus capitis ,Europe ,Infectious Diseases ,Multilocus sequence typing ,business ,Staphylococcus ,Multilocus Sequence Typing - Abstract
Objectives: We present the results of two European external quality assessments (EQAs) conducted in 2014 and 2016 under the auspices of the Study Group on Staphylococci and Staphylococcal Infections of ESCMID. The objective was to assess the performance of participating centres in characterizing Staphylococcus aureus using their standard in-house phenotypic and genotypic protocols.Methods: A total of 11 well-characterized blindly coded S. aureus (n = 9), Staphylococcus argenteus (n = 1) and Staphylococcus capitis (n = 1) strains were distributed to participants for analysis. Species identification, MIC determination, antimicrobial susceptibility testing, antimicrobial resistance and toxin gene detection and molecular typing including spa typing, SCCmec typing and MLST were performed.Results: Thirteen laboratories from 12 European countries participated in one EQA or both EQAs. Despite considerable diversity in the methods employed, good concordance (90%-100%) with expected results was obtained. Discrepancies were observed for: (i) identification of the S. argenteus strain; (ii) phenotypic detection of low-level resistance to oxacillin in the mecC-positive strain; (iii) phenotypic detection of the inducible MLSB strain; and (iv) WGS-based detection of some resistance and toxin genes.Conclusions: Overall, good concordance (90%-100%) with expected results was observed. In some instances, the accurate detection of resistance and toxin genes from WGS data proved problematic, highlighting the need for validated and internationally agreed-on bioinformatics pipelines before such techniques are implemented routinely by microbiology laboratories. We strongly recommend all national reference laboratories and laboratories acting as referral centres to participate in such EQA initiatives.
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- 2018
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7. Severe Disseminated Infection with Emerging Lineage of Methicillin-Sensitive Staphylococcus aureus
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Paul Jewell, Luke Dixon, Ernie Wong, Meg Coleman, Rohma Ghani, James Hatcher, Georgina Russell, Bruno Pichon, Angela Kearns, and Aran Singanayagam
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Meticillin ,Epidemiology ,virulence factors ,lcsh:Medicine ,MRSA and other staphylococci ,MRSA ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antimicrobial resistance ,psoas abscess ,Methicillin ,1108 Medical Microbiology ,bacteria ,flucloxacillin ,retropharyngeal abscess ,Middle Aged ,Staphylococcal Infections ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Infectious Diseases ,Treatment Outcome ,1117 Public Health And Health Services ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Administration, Intravenous ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Immunocompetence ,medicine.drug ,Microbiology (medical) ,Lineage (genetic) ,030106 microbiology ,Immunology ,Virulence ,epidural abscess ,methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,MSSA ,Staphylococcal infections ,Microbiology ,Floxacillin ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Antibiotic resistance ,methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine ,Research Letter ,Humans ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Science & Technology ,Whole Genome Sequencing ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,bacterial infection ,Severe Disseminated Infection with Emerging Lineage of Methicillin-Sensitive Staphylococcus aureus ,1103 Clinical Sciences ,medicine.disease ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Flucloxacillin ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
We report a case of severe disseminated infection in an immunocompetent man caused by an emerging lineage of methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus clonal complex 398. Genes encoding classic virulence factors were absent. The patient made a slow recovery after multiple surgical interventions and a protracted course of intravenous flucloxacillin.
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- 2019
8. Evolution and global transmission of a multidrug-resistant, community-associated methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus lineage from the Indian subcontinent
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D. Ashley Robinson, Sebastián Duchêne, Julian Parkhill, Maho Yokoyama, Simon R. Harris, Deborah A Williamson, Maisem Laabei, Nobumichi Kobayashi, Geoffrey W. Coombs, Ruth C. Massey, Helen Heffernan, Patiyan Andersson, Anna C. Shore, David C. Coleman, Hege Vangstein Aamot, Margaret Ip, Annalisa Pantosti, Henrik Westh, Derek S. Sarovich, Hermínia de Lencastre, Richard V. Goering, Birgit Strommenger, Steven Y. C. Tong, Franziska Layer, Elizabeth Dickson, Matthew V. N. O'Sullivan, Stefan Weber, Leila Skakni, Ralf Ehricht, Peter Slickers, Sharon J. Peacock, Andreas Petersen, Stephen D. Bentley, Gráinne I. Brennan, Stefan Monecke, M. T. G. Holden, Angela Kearns, Eike J. Steinig, Instituto de Tecnologia Química e Biológica António Xavier (ITQB), Williamson, Deborah [0000-0001-7363-6665], Goering, Richard V [0000-0001-7502-7185], Ip, Margaret [0000-0003-1291-6537], Shore, Anna C [0000-0002-6667-0918], Coleman, David C [0000-0003-1797-2888], Parkhill, Julian [0000-0002-7069-5958], Massey, Ruth C [0000-0002-8154-4039], Holden, Mathew T G [0000-0002-4958-2166], Tong, Steven Y C [0000-0002-1368-8356], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, Holden, Mathew TG [0000-0002-4958-2166], Tong, Steven YC [0000-0002-1368-8356], and University of St Andrews. School of Medicine
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CA-MRSA ,Clone (cell biology) ,Drug resistance ,genomic epidemiology ,South Asia ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antimicrobial resistance ,ST772 ,Clinical Science and Epidemiology ,Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial ,Global Transmission ,global transmission ,Phylogeny ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,QR Microbiology ,Staphylococcal Infections ,phylodynamics ,Staphylococcus aureas ,Phylodynamics ,QR1-502 ,3. Good health ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Community-Acquired Infections ,Phenotyping ,Research Article ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,RM ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Asia ,phenotyping ,India ,QH426 Genetics ,Biology ,Staphylococcal infections ,Microbiology ,Evolution, Molecular ,03 medical and health sciences ,Antibiotic resistance ,Virology ,medicine ,Humans ,ddc:610 ,antimicrobial resistance ,Genomic Epidemiology ,QH426 ,030304 developmental biology ,030306 microbiology ,Outbreak ,DAS ,ST722 ,medicine.disease ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,RM Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,QR ,Multiple drug resistance ,Viral phylodynamics ,Sta ,610 Medizin und Gesundheit ,St772 ,Genome, Bacterial ,WGS ,Ca-mrsa ,Wgs ,Bengal Bay - Abstract
The Bengal Bay clone (ST772) is a community-associated and multidrug-resistant Staphylococcus aureus lineage first isolated from Bangladesh and India in 2004. In this study, we showed that the Bengal Bay clone emerged from a virulent progenitor circulating on the Indian subcontinent. Its subsequent global transmission was associated with travel or family contact in the region. ST772 progressively acquired specific resistance elements at limited cost to its fitness and continues to be exported globally, resulting in small-scale community and health care outbreaks. The Bengal Bay clone therefore combines the virulence potential and epidemiology of community-associated clones with the multidrug resistance of health care-associated S. aureus lineages. This study demonstrates the importance of whole-genome sequencing for the surveillance of highly antibiotic-resistant pathogens, which may emerge in the community setting of regions with poor antibiotic stewardship and rapidly spread into hospitals and communities across the world., The evolution and global transmission of antimicrobial resistance have been well documented for Gram-negative bacteria and health care-associated epidemic pathogens, often emerging from regions with heavy antimicrobial use. However, the degree to which similar processes occur with Gram-positive bacteria in the community setting is less well understood. In this study, we traced the recent origins and global spread of a multidrug-resistant, community-associated Staphylococcus aureus lineage from the Indian subcontinent, the Bengal Bay clone (ST772). We generated whole-genome sequence data of 340 isolates from 14 countries, including the first isolates from Bangladesh and India, to reconstruct the evolutionary history and genomic epidemiology of the lineage. Our data show that the clone emerged on the Indian subcontinent in the early 1960s and disseminated rapidly in the 1990s. Short-term outbreaks in community and health care settings occurred following intercontinental transmission, typically associated with travel and family contacts on the subcontinent, but ongoing endemic transmission was uncommon. Acquisition of a multidrug resistance integrated plasmid was instrumental in the emergence of a single dominant and globally disseminated clade in the early 1990s. Phenotypic data on biofilm, growth, and toxicity point to antimicrobial resistance as the driving force in the evolution of ST772. The Bengal Bay clone therefore combines the multidrug resistance of traditional health care-associated clones with the epidemiological transmission of community-associated methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA). Our study demonstrates the importance of whole-genome sequencing for tracking the evolution of emerging and resistant pathogens. It provides a critical framework for ongoing surveillance of the clone on the Indian subcontinent and elsewhere.
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- 2019
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9. Staphylococcus aureus colonisation and acquisition of skin and soft tissue infection amongst Royal Marines recruits: A prospective cohort study
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Joanne L. Fallowfield, T. Davey, M Morgan, David C. Wilson, Bruno Pichon, Neil Thorpe, Elita Jauneikaite, T Ferguson, Matthew K. O'Shea, Mia Mosavie, Angela Kearns, A Shaw, Lucy Lamb, Adrian J. Allsopp, D Fudge, Shiranee Sriskandan, National Institute for Health Research, and Medical Research Council (MRC)
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Adolescent ,Royal Marines ,030106 microbiology ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,1117 Public Health and Health Services ,Panton–Valentine leucocidin ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Throat ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Public Health Surveillance ,Prospective Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective cohort study ,Nose ,business.industry ,Transmission (medicine) ,Soft Tissue Infections ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Skin and soft tissue infections ,1103 Clinical Sciences ,General Medicine ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,medicine.disease ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Military Personnel ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Carriage ,Methicillin-resistant S. aureus ,Cellulitis ,Female ,Staphylococcal Skin Infections ,business - Abstract
Skin and soft tissue infections (SSTIs) are a serious health issue for military personnel. Of particular importance are those caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and Panton-Valentine leucocidin (PVL)-positive S. aureus (PVL-SA), as they have been associated with outbreaks of SSTIs. A prospective observational study was conducted in Royal Marine (RM) recruits to investigate the prevalence of PVL-SA carriage and any association with SSTIs.A total of 1012 RM recruits were followed through a 32-week training programme, with nose and throat swabs obtained at weeks 1, 6, 15 and 32. S. aureus isolates were characterized by antibiotic susceptibility testing, spa typing, presence of mecA/C and PVL genes. Retrospective review of the clinical notes for SSTI acquisition was conducted.S. aureus colonization decreased from Week 1 to Week 32 (41% to 26%, p 0.0001). Of 1168 S. aureus isolates, three out of 1168 (0.3%) were MRSA and ten out of 1168 (0.9%) PVL-positive (all MSSA) and 169 out of 1168 (14.5%) were resistant to clindamycin. Isolates showed genetic diversity with 238 different spa types associated with 25 multi-locus sequence type (MLST) clonal complexes. SSTIs were seen in 35% (351/989) of recruits with 3 training days lost per recruit. SSTI acquisition rate was reduced amongst persistent carriers (p 0.0283).Nose and throat carriage of MRSA and PVL-SA was low among recruits, despite a high incidence of SSTIs being reported, particularly cellulitis. Carriage strains were predominantly MSSA with a marked diversity of genotypes. Persistent nose and/or throat carriage was not associated with SSTI acquisition. Putative person-to-person transmission within troops was identified based on spa typing requiring further research to confirm and explore potential transmission routes.
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- 2019
10. Clonal expansion of community-associated meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in people who inject drugs (PWID): prevalence, risk factors and molecular epidemiology, Bristol, United Kingdom, 2012 to 2017
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Jacquelyn Njoroge, Jane Neale, Rachel Kwiatkowska, Maggie Telfer, Bruno Pichon, Mathew Hickman, Stephen Thompson, Camillus Buunaaisie, Maya Gobin, Angela Kearns, Isabel Oliver, Owen Martin Williams, Michel Doumith, Simon Packer, Vivian Hope, Noreen Hopewell-Kelly, Ellen Heinsbroek, and Monica Desai
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Epidemiology ,Intravenous: microbiology ,community acquired infections epidemiology ,Bacteremia ,MRSA ,medicine.disease_cause ,0302 clinical medicine ,RA0421 ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Staphylococcal Infections/transmission ,Prevalence ,Community acquired infections microbiology ,Infection control ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Substance Abuse, Intravenous ,Phylogeny ,Substance-Related Disorders/microbiology ,Molecular Epidemiology ,Intravenous: complications ,Transmission (medicine) ,community acquired infections ,Substance Abuse ,Staphylococcal Infections ,3. Good health ,Community-Acquired Infections ,Substance abuse ,complications [Intravenous] ,whole-genome sequencing ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Drug users ,microbiology [Intravenous] ,Female ,Staphylococcal epidemiology ,Intravenous ,Adult ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Meticillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Community acquired infections epidemiology ,Community acquired infections ,030106 microbiology ,community acquired infections microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sepsis ,Virology ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Humans ,Retrospective Studies ,Whole-genome sequencing ,Whole Genome Sequencing ,Molecular epidemiology ,business.industry ,Research ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Outbreak ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,United Kingdom ,Molecular Typing ,Colonisation ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Injecting drug use ,business ,staphylococcal epidemiology ,Substance-Related Disorders/complications - Abstract
Background: In 2015, Bristol (South West England) experienced a large increase in cases of meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection in people who inject drugs (PWID). Aim: We aimed to characterise and estimate the prevalence of MRSA colonisation among PWID in Bristol and test evidence of a clonal outbreak. Methods: PWID recruited through an unlinked-anonymous community survey during 2016 completed behavioural questionnaires and were screened for MRSA. Univariable logistic regression examined associations with MRSA colonisation. Whole-genome sequencing used lineage-matched MRSA isolates, comparing PWID (screening and retrospective bacteraemia samples from 2012-2017) with non-PWID (Bristol screening) in Bristol and national reference laboratory database samples. Results: The MRSA colonisation prevalence was 8.7% (13/149) and was associated with frequently injecting in public places (odds ratio (OR): 5.5; 95% confidence interval (CI):1.34–22.70), recent healthcare contact (OR: 4.3; 95% CI: 1.34–13.80) and injecting in groups of three or more (OR: 15.8; 95% CI: 2.51–99.28). People reporting any one of: injecting in public places, injection site skin and soft tissue infection or hospital contact accounted for 12/13 MRSA positive cases (sensitivity 92.3%; specificity 51.5%). Phylogenetic analysis identified a dominant clade associated with infection and colonisation among PWID in Bristol belonging to ST5-SCCmecIVg. Conclusions: MRSA colonisation in Bristol PWID is substantially elevated compared with general population estimates and there is evidence of clonal expansion, community-based transmission and increased infection risk related to the colonising strain. Targeted interventions, including community screening and suppression therapy, education and basic infection control are needed to reduce MRSA infections in PWID.
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- 2019
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11. Genomic and epidemiological evidence of a dominant Panton-Valentine leucocidin-positive Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus aureus lineage in Sri Lanka with spread to the United Kingdom and Australia
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Bruno Pichon, M. Udukala, Cesar A. Arias, E.C. Cook, Angela Kearns, Sisira Siribaddana, T I de Silva, Geoffrey W. Coombs, S.J. Snow, Stanley Pang, Lorena Diaz, Sharla M. McTavish, Emma Boldock, S. Coleman, and Steve Davies
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Whole genome sequencing ,0303 health sciences ,Lineage (genetic) ,Phylogenetic tree ,030306 microbiology ,SCCmec ,social sciences ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,030501 epidemiology ,Biology ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease_cause ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Virology ,3. Good health ,03 medical and health sciences ,Staphylococcus aureus ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Multilocus sequence typing ,0305 other medical science ,Clade ,geographic locations - Abstract
ObjectiveTo undertake the first detailed genomic analysis of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) isolated in Sri Lanka.MethodsA prospective observational study was performed on 94 MRSA isolates collected over a four month period from the Anuradhapura Teaching Hospital, Sri Lanka. Screening for mecA, mecC and the Panton-Valentine leucocidin (PVL)-associated lukS-PV/lukF-PV genes and molecular characterisation by spa typing was undertaken. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) and phylogenetic analysis was performed on selected multilocus sequence type (MLST) clonal complex 5 (CC5) isolates from Sri Lanka, England, Australia and Argentina.ResultsAll 94 MRSA harboured the mecA gene. Nineteen spa types associated with nine MLST clonal complexes were identified. Most isolates were from skin and soft tissue infections (76.9%), with the remainder causing more invasive disease. Sixty two (65.9%) of isolates were PVL positive with the majority (56 isolates; 90.3%) belonging to a dominant CC5 lineage. This lineage, PVL-positive ST5-MRSA-IVc, was associated with community and hospital-onset infections. Based on WGS, representative PVL-positive ST5-MRSA-IVc isolates from Sri Lanka, England and Australia formed a single phylogenetic clade, suggesting wide geographical circulation.ConclusionsWe present the most detailed genomic analysis of MRSA isolated in Sri Lanka to date. The analysis identified a PVL-positive ST5-MRSA-IVc that dominates MRSA clinical infections in Sri Lanka. Furthermore, transmission of the strain has occurred in the United Kingdom and Australia.
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- 2019
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12. First report of lukM-positive livestock-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus CC30 from fattening pigs in Northern Ireland
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Christopher Teale, John Lavery, Angela Lahuerta-Marin, Adrian R. Allen, Bruno Pichon, Conrad Watson, Maria Guelbenzu-Gonzalo, Angela Kearns, and Michel Doumith
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Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,0301 basic medicine ,Veterinary medicine ,Livestock associated ,Swine ,030106 microbiology ,Virulence ,Northern Ireland ,Northern ireland ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Staphylococcal infections ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Bacterial Proteins ,medicine ,Animals ,Pathogen ,Phylogeny ,Swine Diseases ,General Veterinary ,Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ,General Medicine ,Staphylococcal Infections ,Animal husbandry ,medicine.disease ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Staphylococcus aureus - Abstract
The increasing number of reports of livestock-associated meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (LA-MRSA) world-wide attests to the public health concern surrounding this pathogen in animal husbandry and in-contact humans. In Europe, LA-MRSA CC398 is predominant and generally regarded as being of low virulence for animals. Herein we report the recovery of a lineage of LA-MRSA, belonging to CC30, from three pigs in Northern Ireland and which encodes a marker of virulence (lukM and lukF-P83) restricted to animal-associated clones of S. aureus.
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- 2016
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13. Implications of identifying the recently defined members of the Staphylococcus aureus complex S. argenteus and S. schweitzeri: a position paper of members of the ESCMID Study Group for Staphylococci and Staphylococcal Diseases (ESGS)
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Anders Rhod Larsen, Karsten Becker, Jodi A. Lindsay, Angela Kearns, Robert Skov, Henrik Westh, and Frieder Schaumburg
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0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Staphylococcus argenteus ,030106 microbiology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Diagnosis, Differential ,03 medical and health sciences ,Patient safety ,0302 clinical medicine ,Epidemiology ,Infection control ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,Phylogeny ,Transmission (medicine) ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Staphylococcal Infections ,Staphylococcal diseases ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Infectious Diseases ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Position paper ,business - Abstract
Background Staphylococcus argenteus and Staphylococcus schweitzeri, previously known as divergent Staphylococcus aureus clonal lineages, have been recently established as novel, difficult-to-delimit, coagulase-positive species within the S. aureus complex. Methicillin-resistant strains of S. argenteus are known from Australia and the UK. Knowledge of their epidemiology, medical significance and transmission risk is limited and partly contradictory, hampering definitive recommendations. There is mounting evidence that the pathogenicity of S. argenteus is similar to that of ‘classical' S. aureus, while as yet no S. schweitzeri infections have been reported. Aim To provide decision support on whether and how to distinguish and report both species. Sources PubMed, searched for S. argenteus and S. schweitzeri. Content This position paper reviews the main characteristics of both species and draws conclusions for microbiological diagnostics and surveillance as well as infection prevention and control measures. Implications We propose not distinguishing within the S. aureus complex for routine reporting purposes until there is evidence that pathogenicity or clinical outcome differ markedly between the different species. Primarily for research purposes, suitably equipped laboratories are encouraged to differentiate between S. argenteus and S. schweitzeri. Caution is urged if these novel species are explicitly reported. In such cases, a specific comment should be added (i.e. ‘member of the S.aureus complex') to prevent confusion with less- or non-pathogenic staphylococci. Prioritizing aspects of patient safety, methicillin-resistant isolates should be handled as recommended for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). In these cases, the clinician responsible should be directly contacted and informed by the diagnosing microbiological laboratory, as they would be for MRSA. Research is warranted to clarify the epidemiology, clinical impact and implications for infection control of such isolates.
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- 2018
14. Accuracy of different bioinformatics methods in detecting antibiotic resistance and virulence factors from Staphylococcus aureus whole genome sequences
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Bruno Pichon, Phelim Bradley, Zamin Iqbal, Michel Doumith, Dona Foster, Derrick W. Crook, Angela Kearns, N. Claire Gordon, Tanya Golubchik, Tim E. A. Peto, Amy M. Mason, Peter Staves, and A. Sarah Walker
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0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Genotype ,Virulence Factors ,030106 microbiology ,Virulence ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,Staphylococcal infections ,medicine.disease_cause ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Agar dilution ,03 medical and health sciences ,Antibiotic resistance ,Drug Resistance, Bacterial ,medicine ,Humans ,Gene ,Whole genome sequencing ,Computational Biology ,Bacteriology ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Staphylococcal Infections ,medicine.disease ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Phenotype ,Genome, Bacterial ,Software - Abstract
Background: In principle, whole genome sequencing (WGS) can predict phenotypic resistance directly from genotype, replacing laboratory-based tests. However, the contribution of different bioinformatics methods to genotype-phenotype discrepancies has not been systematically explored to date. Methods: We compared three WGS-based bioinformatics methods (Genefinder (read-based), Mykrobe (de Bruijn graph-based) and Typewriter (BLAST-based)) for predicting presence/absence of 83 different resistance determinants and virulence genes, and overall antimicrobial susceptibility, in 1379 Staphylococcus aureus isolates previously characterised by standard laboratory methods (disc diffusion, broth and/or agar dilution and PCR). Results: 99.5% (113830/114457) of individual resistance-determinant/virulence gene predictions were identical between all three methods, with only 627 (0.5%) discordant predictions, demonstrating high overall agreement (Fliess-Kappa=0.98, pConclusions: In this study, the choice between these three specific bioinformatic methods to identify resistance-determinants or other genes in S. aureus did not prove critical, with all demonstrating high concordance with each other and phenotypic/molecular methods. However, each has some limitations and therefore consensus methods provide some assurance.
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- 2018
15. Molecular epidemiology of nasal isolates of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus from Jordan
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Anna Vickers, Angela Kearns, Hamed Alzoubi, Amin A. Aqel, and Bruno Pichon
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Adult ,Male ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Adolescent ,Health Personnel ,Erythromycin ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,MRSA ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,Young Adult ,Bacterial Proteins ,medicine ,Humans ,Penicillin-Binding Proteins ,Healthcare workers ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Child ,Molecular Epidemiology ,Jordan ,SCCmecIVa ,Molecular epidemiology ,business.industry ,SCCmec ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Clindamycin ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Bacterial Typing Techniques ,Ciprofloxacin ,Healthy individuals ,Carriage ,Infectious Diseases ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Female ,Nasal Cavity ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary: Asymptomatic carriage of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) can predispose the host to a wide range of infections. To inform public health strategies, this study sought to determine the prevalence and the phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of MRSA from nasal swabs of health care workers (HCWs) and other healthy individuals in Jordan. Overall, 716 nasal swabs were collected from 297 HCWs, 141 adults and 278 children in the community. MRSA was recovered from 56 (7.8%) nasal swabs, which represented carriage rates of 10.1%, 4.3% and 7.2% among HCWs, adults and children, respectively. The MRSA isolates were resistant to oxacillin (100%), erythromycin (42.8%), tetracycline (37.5%), clindamycin (5.3%), fucidin (5.3%), and ciprofloxacin (3.5%). A total of 17 different spa types belonging to eight different clonal complexes (CCs) were identified. All isolates were mecA positive, and mecC-MRSA was not detected. Analysis of the staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec (SCCmec) elements revealed that the majority (54; 96.4%) of the samples harbored the smaller type IV and V elements (the most common were SCCmec IVa or IVc, and there were two each of the IVg and V elements), and two were nontypable. The genes for Panton-Valentine leukocidin (luk-PV) were detected in 5.4% of the study isolates. A tst-positive, CC22-MRSA-SCCmecIVa clone (spa type t223) was identified as the dominant MRSA lineage among the nasal carriage isolates from both HCWs and other individuals (adults and children) in the community. These findings provide important information for public health personnel for the formulation of effective infection prevention and control strategies. Studies to further our understanding of the distribution, pathogenicity, transmissibility and fitness of this lineage would be prudent. Keywords: MRSA, Healthcare workers, Healthy individuals, SCCmecIVa
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- 2015
16. Robust prediction of resistance to trimethoprim in Staphylococcus aureus
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Martin J. Llewelyn, Derrick W. Crook, A. Sarah Walker, Tim E. A. Peto, Philip W. Fowler, N. Claire Gordon, Kevin Cole, and Angela Kearns
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0301 basic medicine ,Modern medicine ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine.drug_class ,030106 microbiology ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Antibiotics ,Computational biology ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Genome ,Trimethoprim ,03 medical and health sciences ,Antibiotic resistance ,Bacterial Proteins ,Drug Discovery ,Dihydrofolate reductase ,Drug Resistance, Bacterial ,medicine ,Molecular Biology ,Pharmacology ,biology ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase ,Mutation (genetic algorithm) ,Mutation ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Thermodynamics ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The rise of antibiotic resistance threatens modern medicine; to combat it new diagnostic methods are required. Sequencing the whole genome of a pathogen offers the potential to accurately determine which antibiotics will be effective to treat a patient. A key limitation of this approach is that it cannot classify rare or previously unseen mutations. Here we demonstrate that alchemical free energy methods, a well-established class of methods from computational chemistry, can successfully predict whether mutations in Staphylococcus aureus dihydrofolate reductase confer resistance to trimethoprim. We also show that the method is quantitively accurate by calculating how much the most common resistance- 23 conferring mutation, F99Y, reduces the binding free energy of trimethoprim and comparing predicted and experimentally-measured minimum inhibitory concentrations for seven different mutations. Finally, by considering up to 32 free energy calculations for each mutation, we estimate its specificity and sensitivity.
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- 2017
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17. Variable performance of four commercial chromogenic media for detection of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus isolates harbouring mecC
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Elizabeth Dickson, Robert Hill, Anders Rhod Larsen, Michèle Bes, Bruno Pichon, Robert Skov, Angela Kearns, Mark A. Holmes, Camille Kolenda, Christopher Teale, Frédéric Laurent, Céline Dupieux, Pathogénie des Staphylocoques – Staphylococcal Pathogenesis (StaPath), Centre International de Recherche en Infectiologie - UMR (CIRI), École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre National de Reference des Staphylocoques, Université de Lyon, Statens Serum Institut [Copenhagen], Public Health England [London], Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK, Scottish Microbiology Reference Laboratories, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre International de Recherche en Infectiologie (CIRI), École normale supérieure de Lyon (ENS de Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Université Jean Monnet - Saint-Étienne (UJM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École normale supérieure de Lyon (ENS de Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Université Jean Monnet - Saint-Étienne (UJM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and University of Cambridge [UK] (CAM)
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0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Staphylococcus aureus ,030106 microbiology ,Chromogenic media ,medicine.disease_cause ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Bacteriological Techniques ,business.industry ,Chromogenic ,mecC ,General Medicine ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Methicillin resistance ,Staphylococcal Infections ,equipment and supplies ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,[SDV.MP.BAC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Bacteriology ,3. Good health ,Culture Media ,Europe ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Chromogenic Compounds ,[SDV.MP.VIR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Virology ,Epidemiological surveillance ,[SDV.IMM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Immunology ,business - Abstract
International audience; In this study, the performances of four methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) chromogenic screening media were compared for detecting mecC-positive MRSA. Using 111 clinical isolates representative of the various mecC-MRSA clones in Europe, chromID\textregistered MRSA (bioMérieux) and BrillianceTM MRSA 2 (Oxoid Ltd.) showed higher sensitivity (99.1% and 97.3%, respectively) than BBLTM CHROMagar\textregistered MRSA II (BD Diagnostics) and MRSASelectTM (Bio-Rad) (79.3% and 63.1%, respectively) (P \textless0.0001). These findings have important implications for effective public health diagnostics and epidemiological surveillance of MRSA.
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- 2017
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18. Molecular Epidemiology of Staphylococcus aureus Skin and Soft Tissue Infections in the Lao People's Democratic Republic
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Alicia Yeap, Rattanaphone Phetsouvanh, Kate Woods, Bruno Pichon, Angela Kearns, Sayaphet Rattanavong, Viengmon Davong, Paul N. Newton, David A. B. Dance, and Nandini Shetty
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Veterinary medicine ,Lineage (genetic) ,Adolescent ,Tetracycline ,030106 microbiology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Antibiotic resistance ,Interquartile range ,Virology ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Phylogeny ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Whole genome sequencing ,Molecular epidemiology ,business.industry ,Soft Tissue Infections ,Genetic Variation ,Articles ,Skin Diseases, Bacterial ,Middle Aged ,Staphylococcal Infections ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,3. Good health ,Penicillin ,Infectious Diseases ,Laos ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Parasitology ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This is the first report of the molecular epidemiology of Staphylococcus aureus from skin and soft tissue infections (SSTI) in Laos. We selected a random sample of 96 S. aureus SSTI isolates received by the Microbiology Laboratory, Mahosot Hospital, Vientiane, between July 2012 and June 2014, including representation from seven referral hospitals. Isolates underwent susceptibility testing by Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute methods, spa typing and DNA microarray analysis, with whole genome sequencing for rare lineages. Median patient age was 19.5 years (interquartile range 2–48.5 years); 52% (50) were female. Forty-three spa types, representing 17 lineages, were identified. Fifty-eight percent (56) of all isolates encoded Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL), representing six lineages: half of these patients had abscesses and three had positive blood cultures. The dominant lineage was CC121 (39; 41%); all but one isolate encoded PVL and 49% (19) were from children under five. Staphyococcus argenteus was identified in six (6%) patients; mostly adults > 50 years and with diabetes. Six isolates (6%) belonged to rare lineage ST2885; two possibly indicate cross-infection in a neonatal unit. One isolate from a previously undescribed lineage, ST1541, was identified. Antibiotic resistance was uncommon except for penicillin (93; 97%) and tetracycline (48; 50%). Seven (7%) isolates were methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA), belonging to ST239-MRSA-III, CC59-MRSA-V(T) Taiwan Clone, ST2250-MRSA-IV, ST2885-MRSA-V and CC398-MRSA-V. Globally widespread CC5 and CC30 were absent. There are parallels in S. aureus molecular epidemiology between Laos and neighboring countries and these data highlight the prominence of PVL and suggest infiltration of MRSA clones of epidemic potential from surrounding countries.
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- 2017
19. Methicillin resistantStaphylococcus aureusemerged long before the introduction of methicillin in to clinical practice
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Bruno Pichon, Michel Doumith, Stephen D. Bentley, Matthew T. G. Holden, Henrik Westh, Catriona P. Harkins, Hermínia de Lencastre, Julian Parkhill, Angela Kearns, and Alexander Tomasz
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0303 health sciences ,030306 microbiology ,medicine.drug_class ,SCCmec ,Antibiotics ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Biology ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease_cause ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Methicillin resistance ,First generation ,3. Good health ,Microbiology ,Penicillin ,Clinical Practice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine ,030304 developmental biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The spread of drug-resistant bacterial pathogens pose a major threat to global health. It is widely recognised that the widespread use of antibiotics has generated selective pressures that have driven the emergence of resistant strains. Methicillin-resistantStaphylococcus aureus(MRSA) was first observed in 1960, less than one year after the introduction of this second generation β-lactam antibiotic into clinical practice. Epidemiological evidence has always suggested that resistance arose around this period, when themecAgene encoding methicillin resistance carried on an SCCmecelement, was horizontally transferred to an intrinsically sensitive strain ofS. aureus. Whole genome sequencing a collection of the very first MRSA isolates allowed us to reconstruct the evolutionary history of the archetypal MRSA. Bayesian phylogenetic reconstruction was applied to infer the time point at which this early MRSA lineage arose and when SCCmecwas acquired. MRSA emerged in the mid 1940s, following the acquisition of an ancestral type I SCCmecelement, some fourteen years prior to the first therapeutic use of methicillin. Methicillin use was not the original driving factor in the evolution of MRSA as previously thought. Rather it was the widespread use of first generation β-lactams such as penicillin in the years prior to the introduction of methicillin, which selected forS. aureusstrains carrying themecAdeterminant. Crucially this highlights how new drugs, introduced to circumvent known resistance mechanisms, can be rendered ineffective by unrecognised adaptations in the bacterial population due to the historic selective landscape created by the widespread use of other antibiotics.
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- 2017
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20. Re-emergence of methicillin susceptibility in a resistant lineage of Staphylococcus aureus
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James Price, John Paul, Kevin Cole, Martin J. Llewelyn, Alice Ledda, Xavier Didelot, Derrick W. Crook, Angela Kearns, and Medical Research Council (MRC)
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0301 basic medicine ,DYNAMICS ,WAVES ,MRSA ,medicine.disease_cause ,Genome ,Methicillin ,1108 Medical Microbiology ,Genotype ,ELEMENTS ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Pharmacology & Pharmacy ,Original Research ,Cross Infection ,Transmission (medicine) ,Microevolution ,Staphylococcal Infections ,Phenotype ,Infectious Diseases ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,0605 Microbiology ,Microbiology (medical) ,DNA, Bacterial ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Lineage (genetic) ,TRANSMISSION ,030106 microbiology ,GENOMES ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Biology ,Microbiology ,Evolution, Molecular ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology ,Science & Technology ,SCCmec ,STRAINS ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,EVOLUTION ,United Kingdom ,030104 developmental biology ,1115 Pharmacology And Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Methicillin Resistance ,Genetic Fitness ,Genome, Bacterial - Abstract
Objectives Methicil l in - resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is a leading cause of hospital - associated infection. Acquired r esistance is encoded by the mecA gene or its homologue mecC but little is known about the evolutionary dynamics involved in gain and loss of resistance. The objective of this study was to obtain an expanded understanding of S. aureus methicilin resistance micro evolution in vivo , by focusing on a single lineage . Methods We compared the whole genome sequences of 231 isolates from a single epidemic lineage (clonal complex CC30 and spa - type t018) of S. aureus that caused an epidemic in the United Kingdom. Results We show that resistance to methicillin in this single lineage was gained on at least two separate occasions , one of which led to a clonal expansion around 1995 presumably caused by a selective advantage . Resistance was however subsequently lost in vivo by nine strains isolated between 2008 and 201 2 . We describe the genetic mechanisms involved in this loss of 40 resistance and the imperfect relationship between genotypic and phenotypic resistance . Conclusions The recent re - emergence of methicillin susceptibility in this epidemic lineage suggests a significant fitness cost of resistance and reduced selective advantage following the introduction in the mid 2000s of MRSA hospital control measures throughout the United Kingdom.
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- 2017
21. Detection of mecC-Positive Staphylococcus aureus: What To Expect from Immunological Tests Targeting PBP2a?
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Jean-Winoc Decousser, Céline Dupieux, Robert Hill, Sophie Trouillet-Assant, Anders Rhod Larsen, Christopher Teale, Robert Skov, Mark A. Holmes, Frédéric Laurent, Coralie Bouchiat, Bruno Pichon, Angela Kearns, Andreas Petersen, Giles Edwards, Pathogénie des Staphylocoques – Staphylococcal Pathogenesis (StaPath), Centre International de Recherche en Infectiologie - UMR (CIRI), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre National de Reference des Staphylocoques, Université de Lyon, Département de Microbiologie Clinique [HCL Groupement Hospitalier Nord, Lyon], Hospices Civils de Lyon (HCL)-HCL Groupement Hospitalier Nord [Lyon], Statens Serum Institut [Copenhagen], Public Health England [London], Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Cambridge [UK] (CAM), Hôpital Antoine Béclère, Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11), École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP), Centre International de Recherche en Infectiologie (CIRI), École normale supérieure de Lyon (ENS de Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Université Jean Monnet - Saint-Étienne (UJM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École normale supérieure de Lyon (ENS de Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), and Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Université Jean Monnet - Saint-Étienne (UJM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
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0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Staphylococcus aureus ,030106 microbiology ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Biology ,Immunologic Tests ,medicine.disease_cause ,Methicillin resistance ,Homology (biology) ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,methicillin resistance ,Bacterial Proteins ,medicine ,Penicillin-Binding Proteins ,PBP2a detection ,Humans ,Animals ,Letter to the Editor ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,rapid tests ,mecC ,Nucleic acid sequence ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Staphylococcal Infections ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,[SDV.MP.BAC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Bacteriology ,3. Good health ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Rapid identification ,[SDV.MP.VIR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Virology ,Immunological tests ,[SDV.IMM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Immunology - Abstract
Rapid identification of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) isolates is pivotal for the control of their dissemination and for accurate management of infected patients. In 2011, a new mec variant, named mecC , that shows only 70% nucleotide sequence homology with the classical mecA
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- 2017
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22. Prolonged outbreak of Staphylococcus aureus surgical site infection traced to a healthcare worker with psoriasis
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S.A. Crusz, Tim Boswell, Angela Kearns, C. Yates, and S. Holden
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Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health Personnel ,Fusidic acid ,education ,Bacteremia ,medicine.disease_cause ,Disease Outbreaks ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Psoriasis ,Surgical Wound Infection ,Typing ,Intensive care medicine ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Phage typing ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cross Infection ,business.industry ,Thoracic Surgery ,Outbreak ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease ,Hospitals ,Infectious Diseases ,Case-Control Studies ,Female ,Staphylococcal Skin Infections ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Background Meticillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) is a frequent cause of surgical site infection (SSI), but point-source outbreaks are rarely recognized. Aim To describe an outbreak of MSSA SSI in a thoracic surgical unit. Methods An outbreak investigation was started following two postoperative bacteraemias with MSSA resistant to fusidic acid (MSSA FusR). Patients with MSSA FusR were identified from microbiology records and through prospective case finding. Healthcare workers (HCWs) were screened. Isolates were characterized by phage typing, spa typing, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and toxin gene profiling. A case–control study examined the association between one HCW with MSSA FusR and the patients involved in the outbreak. Findings Nineteen patients were identified with MSSA FusR over 16 months. Four isolates were available for typing and all belonged to the same lineage. Seventy-six HCWs were screened. One was a carrier of the outbreak strain (a nurse with psoriasis). All 19 cases were exposed to this HCW compared with only 40/66 controls ( P = 0.003) and cases had a greater duration of exposure ( P = 0.00001, chi-squared for trend). Direct patient contact was documented in 15 cases. The outbreak was halted by thorough cleaning of the ward and removal of the HCW from clinical duty. Conclusion The HCW with psoriasis was the source of this outbreak. MSSA FusR may be a marker for strains associated with skin conditions. HCWs with significant skin conditions may pose an infection risk in surgical settings. Recommendations are made for occupational health teams regarding screening of HCWs with dermatitis.
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- 2014
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23. MRSA spa type t899 from food animals in the UK
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Muna F. Anjum, Marion McMillan, Geoffrey Foster, Manal AbuOun, David Welchman, Jon Rogers, Javier Nunez-Garcia, Andrew Robb, Angela Kearns, Christopher Teale, Bruno Pichon, and Meenaxi Sharma
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0301 basic medicine ,General Veterinary ,business.industry ,030106 microbiology ,General Medicine ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Disease cluster ,biology.organism_classification ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Asymptomatic ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Staphylococcus aureus ,parasitic diseases ,Genotype ,medicine ,Livestock ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Prophage ,Bacteria - Abstract
We report on the detection of a strain of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria with zoonotic potential identified in the UK for the first time. Livestock-associated meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (LA-MRSA), clonal complex (CC) 398 is predominantly asymptomatic in livestock, with infrequent reports of opportunistic infections in farm workers.1 LA-MRSA CC398, spa type t899, was detected from UK animals, harbouring prophage φSa3-immune evasion cluster (IEC) genes, sak , scn and chp , markers for human adaptation, which have been absent from previously reported UK CC398 animal strains. 2, 3 In 2016, …
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- 2018
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24. Detection and molecular characterization of Livestock-Associated MRSA in raw meat on retail sale in North West England
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J McLauchlin, Michel Doumith, Bruno Pichon, Hayley Wilkinson, Angela Kearns, Robert Hill, and A Fox
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0301 basic medicine ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Veterinary medicine ,Turkeys ,Livestock ,Meat ,Swine ,030106 microbiology ,Food Contamination ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Foodborne Diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Food chain ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Colonization ,Raw meat ,Clade ,Genotyping ,Phylogeny ,business.industry ,Staphylococcal Infections ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Biotechnology ,England ,North west ,Staphylococcus aureus ,business ,Chickens - Abstract
Limited data are available on the prevalence of livestock-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (LA-MRSA) in the UK. We tested 124 raw meat samples for MRSA including pork (n = 63), chicken (n = 50) and turkey (n = 11) collected from retail outlets in North West England between March and July 2015. MRSA was recovered from nine (7·3%) samples (four chicken, three pork and two turkey) from different butchers and supermarkets. Four were labelled of UK origin, three were from continental Europe; the origin was not specified for two samples. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS), spa typing and the presence of lineage-specific canonical single nucleotide polymorphisms confirmed that they belonged to the livestock-associated clade of clonal complex (CC) 398. Seven (77·8%) isolates were multi-drug resistant. Phylogenetic analyses showed the isolates were diverse, suggesting multiple silent introductions of LA-MRSA into the UK food chain. Two chicken meat isolates belonged to a sub-clade recently reported from human cases in Europe where poultry meat was the probable source. The low levels of MRSA identified (
- Published
- 2016
25. Improved understanding of an outbreak of meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in a regional burns centre via whole-genome sequencing
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Angela Kearns, Naiem Moiemen, Mark I. Garvey, Craig W Bradley, Bruno Pichon, and B. Oppenheim
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0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,030106 microbiology ,Burn Units ,030501 epidemiology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Staphylococcal infections ,Microbiology ,Disease Outbreaks ,03 medical and health sciences ,Molecular typing ,Medicine ,Humans ,Whole genome sequencing ,Cross Infection ,Molecular Epidemiology ,Molecular epidemiology ,business.industry ,Outbreak ,General Medicine ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Staphylococcal Infections ,medicine.disease ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Virology ,Molecular Typing ,Infectious Diseases ,Meticillin resistant ,Staphylococcus aureus ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Burns ,Genome, Bacterial - Abstract
Journal of Hospital Infection - In Press.Proof corrected by the author Available online since dimanche 9 octobre 2016
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- 2016
26. A point mutation in AgrC determines cytotoxic or colonizing properties associated with phenotypic variants of ST22 MRSA strains
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Anna Norrby-Teglund, Angela Kearns, Sushma Prabhakara, Nikolai Siemens, Disha B. Mohan, Johanna Snäll, Srikanth Mairpady Shambat, Gayathri Arakere, Balasubramanian Gopal, Ian R. Monk, Mattias Svensson, Karthickeyan Chella Krishnan, Malak Kotb, François Vandenesch, Santhosh Mukundan, Division of Infectious Diseases [Stockholm, Sweden] (Department of Medicine Solna), Karolinska Institutet [Stockholm], Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Melbourne, Molecular Biophysics Unit, Indian Institute of Science, University of North Dakota [Grand Forks] (UND), Society for Innovation and Development, Department of Microbiology-Indian Institute of Science, Public Health England [London], Pathogénie des Staphylocoques – Staphylococcal Pathogenesis (StaPath), Centre International de Recherche en Infectiologie - UMR (CIRI), École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre National de Reference des Staphylocoques, Université de Lyon, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre International de Recherche en Infectiologie (CIRI), École normale supérieure de Lyon (ENS de Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Université Jean Monnet - Saint-Étienne (UJM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École normale supérieure de Lyon (ENS de Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), and Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Université Jean Monnet - Saint-Étienne (UJM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
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Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,0301 basic medicine ,030106 microbiology ,Virulence ,Molecular Biophysics Unit ,Skin infection ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Article ,Cell Line ,Microbiology ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Bacterial Proteins ,Cathelicidins ,medicine ,Point Mutation ,Animals ,Humans ,Cysteine ,Tyrosine ,Tropism ,Multidisciplinary ,Animal ,Point mutation ,medicine.disease ,[SDV.MP.BAC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Bacteriology ,3. Good health ,Disease Models, Animal ,Viral Tropism ,Phenotype ,030104 developmental biology ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Disease Models ,[SDV.MP.VIR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Virology ,Tissue tropism ,[SDV.IMM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Immunology ,Staphylococcal Skin Infections ,Protein Kinases ,Protein Binding ,Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides - Abstract
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is a major cause of skin and soft tissue infections. One of the highly successful and rapidly disseminating clones is MRSA ST22 commonly associated with skin tropism. Here we show that a naturally occurring single amino acid substitution (tyrosine to cysteine) at position 223 of AgrC determines starkly different ST22 S. aureus virulence phenotypes, e.g. cytotoxic or colonizing, as evident in both in vitro and in vivo skin infections. Y223C amino acid substitution destabilizes AgrC-AgrA interaction leading to a colonizing phenotype characterized by upregulation of bacterial surface proteins. The colonizing phenotype strains cause less severe skin tissue damage, show decreased susceptibility towards the antimicrobial LL-37 and induce autophagy. In contrast, cytotoxic strains with tyrosine at position 223 of AgrC cause infections characterized by inflammasome activation and severe skin tissue pathology. Taken together, the study demonstrates how a single amino acid substitution in the histidine kinase receptor AgrC of ST22 strains determines virulence properties and infection outcome.
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- 2016
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27. A pilot study of rapid benchtop sequencing of Staphylococcus aureus and Clostridium difficile for outbreak detection and surveillance
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Daniel J. Wilson, Ip Clc., Angela Kearns, N C Gordon, Anne-Sophie Walker, Elizabeth M. Batty, Mark H. Wilcox, Peto Tea., R Lay, Peter Donnelly, Lily O’Connor, John E. Paul, Xavier Didelot, Rory Bowden, David Buck, Paolo Piazza, David W Eyre, Derrick W. Crook, Tanya Golubchik, and A Shaw
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0303 health sciences ,030306 microbiology ,business.industry ,Transmission (medicine) ,Research ,Outbreak ,Genetics and Genomics ,General Medicine ,Clostridium difficile ,Bioinformatics ,C difficile ,medicine.disease_cause ,Genome ,Virology ,Optimal management ,3. Good health ,03 medical and health sciences ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Medicine ,Infection control ,business ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Objectives To investigate the prospects of newly available benchtop sequencers to provide rapid whole-genome data in routine clinical practice. Next-generation sequencing has the potential to resolve uncertainties surrounding the route and timing of person-to-person transmission of healthcare-associated infection, which has been a major impediment to optimal management. Design The authors used Illumina MiSeq benchtop sequencing to undertake case studies investigating potential outbreaks of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and Clostridium difficile. Setting Isolates were obtained from potential outbreaks associated with three UK hospitals. Participants Isolates were sequenced from a cluster of eight MRSA carriers and an associated bacteraemia case in an intensive care unit, another MRSA cluster of six cases and two clusters of C difficile. Additionally, all C difficile isolates from cases over 6 weeks in a single hospital were rapidly sequenced and compared with local strain sequences obtained in the preceding 3 years. Main outcome measure Whole-genome genetic relatedness of the isolates within each epidemiological cluster. Results Twenty-six MRSA and 15 C difficile isolates were successfully sequenced and analysed within 5 days of culture. Both MRSA clusters were identified as outbreaks, with most sequences in each cluster indistinguishable and all within three single nucleotide variants (SNVs). Epidemiologically unrelated isolates of the same spa-type were genetically distinct (≥21 SNVs). In both C difficile clusters, closely epidemiologically linked cases (in one case sharing the same strain type) were shown to be genetically distinct (≥144 SNVs). A reconstruction applying rapid sequencing in C difficile surveillance provided early outbreak detection and identified previously undetected probable community transmission. Conclusions This benchtop sequencing technology is widely generalisable to human bacterial pathogens. The findings provide several good examples of how rapid and precise sequencing could transform identification of transmission of healthcare-associated infection and therefore improve hospital infection control and patient outcomes in routine clinical practice., Article summary Article focus To investigate the prospects of newly available benchtop sequencers to provide rapid whole-genome data in routine clinical practice. In particular to investigate the potential of such technology for identification of transmission events of healthcare-associated pathogens. Key messages We demonstrate benchtop sequencing can enhance hospital infection control through high precision support and rejection of transmission using genetic data. Whole-genome data provided additional genetic resolution over existing genetic typing strategies. We also show this technology offers turnaround times of under a week in a format that, in contrast to molecular typing, is organism independent. Strengths and limitations of this study The case studies presented provide several good examples of how rapid and precise sequencing could transform identification of transmission of healthcare-associated infection. Given this is a pilot study, further evaluations of the impact of this technology on hospital infection control are required. However, this study provides a clear rationale for future work undertaking formal comparisons of benchtop sequencing with existing local and national typing schemes.
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- 2016
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28. Identification of commonly expressed exoproteins and proteolytic cleavage events by proteomic mining of clinically-relevant UK isolates of Staphylococcus aureus
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Nicola N. Lynskey, Matthew K. Siggins, Shiranee Sriskandan, Angela Kearns, Magdalena Gierula, Debra Smith, Robert Edwards, Mia Mosavie, Claire E. Turner, Bruno Pichon, Wellcome Trust, Medical Research Council (MRC), and Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust- BRC Funding
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Proteomics ,0301 basic medicine ,Virulence Factors/genetics ,Proteome ,Proteolysis ,030106 microbiology ,Biology ,Staphylococcal infections ,medicine.disease_cause ,Genome ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Bacterial Proteins/chemistry ,medicine ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Peptide sequence ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,United Kingdom ,Staphylococcal Infections/microbiology ,Staphylococcus aureus/genetics ,030104 developmental biology ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus/genetics - Abstract
The range of exoproteins and core exoproteome of 14 S. aureus isolates representing major lineages associated with asymptomatic carriage and clinical disease in the United Kingdom was identified by mass spectrometry proteomics using a combined database incorporating sequences derived from 39 S. aureus genomes. In all, 632 different proteins were identified and, of these, only 52 (8%) were found in all 14 isolates whereas 144 (23%) were found in just a single isolate. Comparison of the observed mass of each protein (based on migration by SDS-polyacrylamide electrophoresis) with its predicted mass (based on amino acid sequence) suggested that 95% of the proteins identified were not subject to any major post translational modification. Migration of 5% of proteins was not as expected: 1% of proteins migrated at a mass greater than predicted, while 4% of proteins appeared to have undergone proteolytic cleavage; these included SsaA2, Aur, SspP, Ebh as well as BlaR1, MecR1, FsH, OatA and LtaS. Intriguingly, a truncated SasG was produced by a single CC8 USA300-like strain. The analysis provided evidence of the marked heterogeneity in protein expression by S. aureus in broth, while yielding a core but narrow common exoproteome.
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- 2016
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29. Whole-Genome Sequencing for Routine Pathogen Surveillance in Public Health: a Population Snapshot of Invasive Staphylococcus aureus in Europe
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David M. Aanensen, Edward J. Feil, Matthew T. G. Holden, Janina Dordel, Corin A. Yeats, Artemij Fedosejev, Richard Goater, Santiago Castillo-Ramírez, Jukka Corander, Caroline Colijn, Monika A. Chlebowicz, Leo Schouls, Max Heck, Gerlinde Pluister, Raymond Ruimy, Gunnar Kahlmeter, Jenny íÅhman, Erika Matuschek, Alexander W. Friedrich, Julian Parkhill, Stephen D. Bentley, Brian G. Spratt, Hajo Grundmann, Helmut Mittermayer, Karina Krziwanek, Sabine Stumvoll, Walter Koller, Olivier Denis, Marc Struelens, Dimitr Nashev, Ana Budimir, Smilja Kalenic, Despo Pieridou-Bagatzouni, Vladislav Jakubu, Helena Zemlickova, Henrik Westh, Anders Rhod Larsen, Robert Skov, Frederic Laurent, Jerome Ettienne, Birgit Strommenger, Wolfgang Witte, Sofia Vourli, Alkis Vatopoulos, Anni Vainio, Jaana Vuopio-Varkila, Miklos Fuzi, Erika UngvíÅóóóári, Stephan Murchan, Angela Rossney, Edvins Miklasevics, Arta Balode, Gunnsteinn Haraldsson, Karl G. Kristinsson, Monica Monaco, Annalisa Pantosti, Michael Borg, Marga van Santen-Verheuvel, Xander Huijsdens, Lillian Marstein, Trond Jacobsen, Gunnar Skov Simonsen, Marta Airesde-Sousa, Herminia de Lencastre, Agnieszka Luczak-Kadlubowska, Waleria Hryniewicz, Monica Straut, Irina Codita, Maria Perez-Vazquez, Jesus Oteo Iglesias, Vesna Cvitkovic Spik, Manica Mueller-Premru, Sara Haeggman, Barbro Olsson-Liljequist, Matthew Ellington, Angela Kearns, Wellcome Trust, Medical Research Council (Reino Unido), University of St Andrews. School of Medicine, University of St Andrews. Infection Group, University of St Andrews. Biomedical Sciences Research Complex, Microbes in Health and Disease (MHD), National Institute for Health Research, and Medical Research Council (MRC)
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0301 basic medicine ,METHICILLIN-RESISTANT ,Population level ,MRSA ,Disease Outbreaks ,RA0421 ,RA0421 Public health. Hygiene. Preventive Medicine ,education.field_of_study ,SINGLE-NUCLEOTIDE POLYMORPHISMS ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Staphylococcal Infections ,QR1-502 ,3. Good health ,COMMUNITY ,Europe ,Epidemiological Monitoring ,Snapshot (computer storage) ,epidemiology ,BDC ,Research Article ,STRAIN ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine.medical_specialty ,GENES ,030106 microbiology ,Population ,NDAS ,Context (language use) ,Biology ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Antibiotic resistance ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Virology ,CLONE ,Drug Resistance, Bacterial ,medicine ,Humans ,Computer Simulation ,Road map ,education ,Whole genome sequencing ,business.industry ,Public health ,microbiology ,Computational Biology ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Data science ,EVOLUTION ,Ingénierie biomédicale ,Biotechnology ,VIRULENCE ,The spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria is a public health emergency of global concern, threatening medical intervention at every level of health care delivery ,Microbiologie et protistologie [bacteriol.virolog.mycolog.] ,business ,Genome, Bacterial ,Software ,European SRL Working Group ,TOXIC-SHOCK-SYNDROME - Abstract
The implementation of routine whole-genome sequencing (WGS) promises to transform our ability to monitor the emergence and spread of bacterial pathogens. Here we combined WGS data from 308 invasive Staphylococcus aureus isolates corresponding to a pan-European population snapshot, with epidemiological and resistance data. Geospatial visualization of the data is made possible by a generic software tool designed for public health purposes that is available at the project URL (http:// www.microreact.org/project/EkUvg9uY?tt=rc). Our analysis demonstrates that high-risk clones can be identified on the basis of population level properties such as clonal relatedness, abundance, and spatial structuring and by inferring virulence and resistance properties on the basis of gene content. We also show that in silico predictions of antibiotic resistance profiles are at least as reliable as phenotypic testing. We argue that this work provides a comprehensive road map illustrating the three vital components for future molecular epidemiological surveillance: (i) large-scale structured surveys, (ii) WGS, and (iii) communityoriented database infrastructure and analysis tools. IMPORTANCE The spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria is a public health emergency of global concern, threatening medical intervention at every level of health care delivery. Several recent studies have demonstrated the promise of routine wholegenome sequencing (WGS) of bacterial pathogens for epidemiological surveillance, outbreak detection, and infection control. However, as this technology becomes more widely adopted, the key challenges of generating representative national and international data sets and the development of bioinformatic tools to manage and interpret the data become increasingly pertinent. This study provides a road map for the integration of WGS data into routine pathogen surveillance. We emphasize the importance of large-scale routine surveys to provide the population context for more targeted or localized investigation and the development of open-access bioinformatic tools to provide the means to combine and compare independently generated data with publicly available data sets., 0, SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2016
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30. Community and nosocomial transmission of Panton–Valentine leucocidin-positive community-associated meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus: implications for healthcare
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Matthew J. Ellington, Barry Cookson, N. Coetzee, Eve Boakes, J.M. Orendi, Angela Kearns, Peter M Hawkey, and Katherine J. Hardy
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Adult ,Male ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Bacterial Toxins ,Antibiotics ,Exotoxins ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,medicine.disease_cause ,Disease Outbreaks ,Fatal Outcome ,Leukocidins ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,Pandemic ,Humans ,Medicine ,Infection control ,Intensive care medicine ,Retrospective Studies ,Family Health ,Cross Infection ,business.industry ,Public health ,Infant ,General Medicine ,Staphylococcal Infections ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,United Kingdom ,Community-Acquired Infections ,Infectious Diseases ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Carrier State ,Etiology ,Female ,Contact Tracing ,Panton–Valentine leukocidin ,business ,Delivery of Health Care ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Summary In the UK, infections due to Panton–Valentine leucocidin-positive community-associated meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (PVL-MRSA) have been reported sporadically. In September 2006, a fatal PVL-MRSA infection occurred in a Filipino healthcare worker (HCW) after she underwent caesarean section. Throat and nasal swabs were obtained from contacts of cases in community and hospital. MRSA with an antibiogram similar to the PVL-MRSA strain were characterised including toxin gene profiling, polymerase chain reaction- and sequence-based typing. Carriers underwent decolonisation treatment, and HCWs were restricted from patient care until they and their household members were considered negative for PVL-MRSA. The PVL-MRSA belonged to ST30, was protein A gene ( spa ) type t019, SCC mec IVc, agr 3, and resistant only to β-lactam antibiotics. Representatives of the same lineage were identified among a further 16 individuals in community and hospital. Infections likely to be caused by PVL-MRSA had occurred in 12 cases, and were likely to be hospital-acquired in two patients (one fatal) and occupationally acquired in one HCW. Nine cases worked as nursing staff in the hospital. Eight of these had emigrated from the Philippines in the previous five years and were linked socially. Thus, PVL-MRSA-ST30 was detected in a HCW community in the UK. This is the first report of nosocomial transmission of this pandemic clone in the UK associated with a fatality. Increased vigilance in healthcare and community is needed in response to this emerging threat.
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- 2010
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31. Adaptation to vancomycin pressure of multiresistant Staphylococcus capitis NRCS-A involved in neonatal sepsis
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Jean-Charles Picaud, Frédéric Laurent, Patricia Martins-Simoes, Marine Butin, Jean-Philippe Rasigade, François Vandenesch, Angela Kearns, Olivier Claris, Pathogénie des Staphylocoques – Staphylococcal Pathogenesis (StaPath), Centre International de Recherche en Infectiologie - UMR (CIRI), École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre National de Reference des Staphylocoques, Université de Lyon, Service de Néonatalogie [Lyon], Hôpital de la Croix-Rousse [CHU - HCL], Hospices Civils de Lyon (HCL)-Hospices Civils de Lyon (HCL), Public Health England [London], Service Réanimation Néonatale, Groupement Hospitalier Est, Hospices Civils de Lyon, Hospices Civils de Lyon (HCL)-Groupement Hospitalier Est, Laboratoire de Bactériologie de l'Hôpital de la Croix-Rousse, Hospices Civils de Lyon (HCL), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre International de Recherche en Infectiologie (CIRI), École normale supérieure de Lyon (ENS de Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Université Jean Monnet - Saint-Étienne (UJM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École normale supérieure de Lyon (ENS de Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), and Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Université Jean Monnet - Saint-Étienne (UJM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
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Microbiology (medical) ,Staphylococcus ,Adaptation, Biological ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Staphylococcal infections ,medicine.disease_cause ,Electron ,Microbiology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Staphylococcus epidermidis ,Cell Wall ,Vancomycin ,Sepsis ,medicine ,Transmission ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Serial Passage ,Adaptation ,Pharmacology ,Microscopy ,biology ,Teicoplanin ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Staphylococcal Infections ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Biological ,Newborn ,[SDV.MP.BAC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Bacteriology ,3. Good health ,Staphylococcus capitis ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Infectious Diseases ,chemistry ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Linezolid ,[SDV.MP.VIR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Virology ,[SDV.IMM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Immunology ,Daptomycin ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
International audience; OBJECTIVES: The Staphylococcus capitis clone NRCS-A has recently been described as a frequent cause of late-onset sepsis (LOS) in pre-term neonates worldwide. Representatives of this clone exhibit non-susceptibility to vancomycin, the first-line agent used in LOS. Cases of prolonged S. capitis LOS despite vancomycin treatment have been reported. We investigated whether NRCS-A strains exhibit faster adaptation to vancomycin pressure as compared with other staphylococci. METHODS: Strains of S. capitis NRCS-A, S. capitis non-NRCS-A and Staphylococcus epidermidis (n?=?2 each, all with vancomycin MICs
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- 2015
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32. Combinations of β-lactam or aminoglycoside antibiotics with plectasin are synergistic against methicillin-sensitive and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
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James Vaudrey, Brigita Vaiciunaite, Anthony R.M. Coates, Sharla M. McTavish, Yanmin Hu, Alexander G. Liu, Angela Kearns, and Christiana Moigboi
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Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine.drug_class ,Science ,Antibiotics ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Penicillins ,Biology ,beta-Lactams ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Mice ,medicine ,polycyclic compounds ,Animals ,Multidisciplinary ,Aminoglycoside ,Amoxicillin ,Staphylococcal Infections ,Plectasin ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Antimicrobial ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,3. Good health ,Penicillin ,Aminoglycosides ,Medicine ,Vancomycin ,Female ,Gentamicin ,Gentamicins ,Peptides ,Research Article ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Bacterial infections remain the leading killer worldwide which is worsened by the continuous emergence of antibiotic resistance. In particular, methicillin-sensitive (MSSA) and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) are prevalent and the latter can be difficult to treat. The traditional strategy of novel therapeutic drug development inevitably leads to emergence of resistant strains, rendering the new drugs ineffective. Therefore, rejuvenating the therapeutic potentials of existing antibiotics offers an attractive novel strategy. Plectasin, a defensin antimicrobial peptide, potentiates the activities of other antibiotics such as β-lactams, aminoglycosides and glycopeptides against MSSA and MRSA. We performed in vitro and in vivo investigations to test against genetically diverse clinical isolates of MSSA (n = 101) and MRSA (n = 115). Minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) were determined by the broth microdilution method. The effects of combining plectasin with β-lactams, aminoglycosides and glycopeptides were examined using the chequerboard method and time kill curves. A murine neutropenic thigh model and a murine peritoneal infection model were used to test the effect of combination in vivo. Determined by factional inhibitory concentration index (FICI), plectasin in combination with aminoglycosides (gentamicin, neomycin or amikacin) displayed synergistic effects in 76-78% of MSSA and MRSA. A similar synergistic response was observed when plectasin was combined with β-lactams (penicillin, amoxicillin or flucloxacillin) in 87-89% of MSSA and MRSA. Interestingly, no such interaction was observed when plectasin was paired with vancomycin. Time kill analysis also demonstrated significant synergistic activities when plectasin was combined with amoxicillin, gentamicin or neomycin. In the murine models, plectasin at doses as low as 8 mg/kg augmented the activities of amoxicillin and gentamicin in successful treatment of MSSA and MRSA infections. We demonstrated that plectasin strongly rejuvenates the therapeutic potencies of existing antibiotics in vitro and in vivo. This is a novel strategy that can have major clinical implications in our fight against bacterial infections.
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- 2015
33. Use of Vitek 2 Antimicrobial Susceptibility Profile To Identify mecC in Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus
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Kathy E. Raven, Edward J. P. Cartwright, Theodore Gouliouris, Robert Skov, Gavin K. Paterson, Mark A. Holmes, Sharon J. Peacock, Bruno Pichon, Ewan M. Harrison, Angela Kearns, Julian Parkhill, M. Estée Török, Anders Rhod Larsen, and Giles Edwards
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Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Microbiology (medical) ,0303 health sciences ,030306 microbiology ,business.industry ,Antimicrobial susceptibility ,Bacteriology ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Gold standard (test) ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease_cause ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical microbiology ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine ,Screening method ,Humans ,business ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
The emergence of mecC methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) poses a diagnostic challenge for clinical microbiology laboratories. Using the Vitek 2 system, we tested a panel of 896 Staphylococcus aureus isolates and found that an oxacillin-sensitive/cefoxitin-resistant profile had a sensitivity of 88.7% and a specificity of 99.5% for the identification of mecC MRSA isolates. The presence of the mecC gene, determined by bacterial whole-genome sequencing, was used as the gold standard. This profile could provide a zero-cost screening method for identification of mecC -positive MRSA strains.
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- 2013
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34. Nosocomial outbreak of staphyloccocal scalded skin syndrome in neonates in England, December 2012 to March 2013
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L. M. Milne, A. Bentley, S. Loader, F. Thompson, Sophie Newitt, Richard Puleston, M. Logan, Angela Kearns, A. Thomas, and Karthikeyan Paranthaman
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Adult ,Male ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Epidemiology ,Health Personnel ,medicine.disease_cause ,Disease Outbreaks ,Infectious Disease Transmission, Professional-to-Patient ,Neonatal Screening ,Virology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Mass screening ,Cross Infection ,Infection Control ,business.industry ,Scalded skin syndrome ,Infant, Newborn ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Outbreak ,Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome ,medicine.disease ,Nurseries, Hospital ,Carriage ,England ,Nasal Swab ,Female ,Staphylococcal Scalded Skin Syndrome ,business - Abstract
Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome (SSSS) is a blistering skin condition caused by exfoliative toxin-producing strains of Staphylococcus aureus. Outbreaks of SSSS in maternity settings are rarely reported. We describe an outbreak of SSSS that occurred among neonates born at a maternity unit in England during December 2012 to March 2013. Detailed epidemiological and microbiological investigations were undertaken. Eight neonates were found to be infected with the outbreak strain of S. aureus, of spa type t346, representing a single pulsotype. All eight isolates contained genes encoding exfoliative toxin A (eta) and six of them contained genes encoding toxin B (etb). Nasal swabs taken during targeted staff screening yielded a staphylococcal carriage rate of 21% (17/80), but none contained the outbreak strain. Mass screening involving multi-site swabbing and pooled, enrichment culture identified a healthcare worker (HCW) with the outbreak strain. This HCW was known to have a chronic skin condition and their initial nasal screen was negative. The outbreak ended when they were excluded from work. This outbreak highlights the need for implementing robust swabbing and culture methods when conventional techniques are unsuccessful in identifying staff carrier(s). This study adds to the growing body of evidence on the role of HCWs in nosocomial transmission of S. aureus.
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- 2014
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35. Livestock-associated MRSA detected in pigs in Great Britain
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Simon Hall, Angela Kearns, and Suzanne Eckford
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Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Swine Diseases ,Veterinary medicine ,Livestock associated ,Lung ,integumentary system ,General Veterinary ,business.industry ,animal diseases ,General Medicine ,Staphylococcal Infections ,Northern ireland ,Amoxicillin ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease_cause ,Staphylococcal infections ,medicine.disease ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine ,Animals ,business ,Skin lesion ,medicine.drug - Abstract
FOLLOWING the recent report of the detection of livestock-associated meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (LA-MRSA) in a pig from a farm in Northern Ireland (Hartley and others 2014), we wish to report the isolation of LA-MRSA from piglets with skin disease from a breeder-finisher farm, located in eastern England. Two 10-day-old piglets with skin lesions were submitted to an APHA veterinary investigation centre on December 30, 2014. Eleven litters were affected and, of 60 piglets with the condition, six died. Treatment had been with parenteral amoxicillin. Both piglets submitted for investigation had been euthanased and had multifocal skin lesions ranging from 2 mm to 20 mm in size, with an overlying, crusting, fibrinous exudate. Gross lesions were similar to those observed in exudative epidermitis (known as greasy pig disease). Cultures of affected areas of skin from both piglets and of lung from one piglet yielded profuse growths of S aureus , which were positive for the altered penicillin-binding protein (PBP2') by …
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- 2015
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36. A novel hybrid SCCmec-mecC region in Staphylococcus sciuri
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Sharon J. Peacock, Ruth N. Zadoks, Matthew T. G. Holden, Bruno Pichon, Xiaoliang Ba, Ewan M. Harrison, Julian Parkhill, Joana Rolo, Gavin K. Paterson, Fiona J. E. Morgan, Angela Kearns, Mark A. Holmes, Harrison, Ewan [0000-0003-2720-0507], Ba, Xiaoliang [0000-0002-3882-3585], Morgan, Fiona [0000-0003-0583-7996], Peacock, Sharon [0000-0002-1718-2782], Parkhill, Julian [0000-0002-7069-5958], Holmes, Mark [0000-0002-5454-1625], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, University of St Andrews. School of Medicine, University of St Andrews. Infection Group, and University of St Andrews. Biomedical Sciences Research Complex
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,DNA, Bacterial ,Genotype ,Staphylococcus ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Context (language use) ,QH426 Genetics ,MRSA ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Staphylococcal infections ,law.invention ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,law ,Gene Order ,polycyclic compounds ,medicine ,Staphylococcus sciuri ,Animals ,Pharmacology (medical) ,mecA ,QH426 ,Polymerase chain reaction ,030304 developmental biology ,Original Research ,Pharmacology ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,030306 microbiology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,SCCmec ,Gene Expression Profiling ,β-lactams ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Staphylococcal Infections ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,3. Good health ,Infectious Diseases ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Genes, Bacterial ,bacteria ,Cattle ,Genome, Bacterial - Abstract
Objectives: Methicillin resistance in Staphylococcus spp. results from the expression of an alternative penicillin-binding protein 2a (encoded by mecA) with a low affinity for β-lactam antibiotics. Recently, a novel variant of mecA known as mecC (formerly mecALGA251) was identified in Staphylococcus aureus isolates from both humans and animals. In this study, we identified two Staphylococcus sciuri subsp. carnaticus isolates from bovine infections that harbour three different mecA homologues: mecA, mecA1 and mecC.\ud \ud Methods: We subjected the two isolates to whole-genome sequencing to further understand the genetic context of the mec-containing region. We also used PCR and RT–PCR to investigate the excision and expression of the SCCmec element and mec genes, respectively.\ud \ud Results: Whole-genome sequencing revealed a novel hybrid SCCmec region at the orfX locus consisting of a class E mec complex (mecI-mecR1-mecC1-blaZ) located immediately downstream of a staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec (SCCmec) type VII element. A second SCCmec attL site (attL2), which was imperfect, was present downstream of the mecC region. PCR analysis of stationary-phase cultures showed that both the SCCmec type VII element and a hybrid SCCmec-mecC element were capable of excision from the genome and forming a circular intermediate. Transcriptional analysis showed that mecC and mecA, but not mecA1, were both expressed in liquid culture supplemented with oxacillin.\ud \ud Conclusions: Overall, this study further highlights that a range of staphylococcal species harbour the mecC gene and furthers the view that coagulase-negative staphylococci associated with animals may act as reservoirs of antibiotic resistance genes for more pathogenic staphylococcal species.
- Published
- 2013
37. Enhanced surveillance of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) bacteraemia in children in the UK and Ireland
- Author
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Mark Ganner, Robert Hill, Barry Cookson, Angela S. Rossney, Alan P. Johnson, Angela Kearns, Andre Charlett, David M. Livermore, Robert Cunney, Theresa Lamagni, Georgia Duckworth, Catherine Goodall, Ruth Blackburn, Mike Sharland, Ruth Gilbert, and Julie Wilson
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Meticillin ,Adolescent ,Bacteremia ,medicine.disease_cause ,Staphylococcal infections ,Age Distribution ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Antibacterial agent ,Cross Infection ,business.industry ,Public health ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Staphylococcal Infections ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,United Kingdom ,Child, Preschool ,Population Surveillance ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Methicillin Resistance ,business ,Ireland ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To determine the incidence and demographic features of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) bacteraemia in children in the UK and Ireland and to characterise MRSA isolated from cases.Prospective surveillance study.Children aged16 years hospitalised with bacteraemia due to MRSA.Cases were ascertained by active surveillance involving paediatricians reporting to the British Paediatric Surveillance Unit and by routine laboratory surveillance. Patient characteristics were obtained using questionnaires sent to reporting paediatricians. MRSA isolates were characterised using molecular and phenotypic techniques including antimicrobial susceptibility testing.265 episodes of MRSA bacteraemia were ascertained, involving 252 children. The overall incidence rate was 1.1 per 100 000 child population per year (95% CI 0.9 to 1.2): 61% of the children were aged1 year (a rate of 9.7 cases per 100 000 population per year (95% CI 8.2 to 11.4)) and 35% were1 month. Clinical data were obtained from 115 cases. The clinical presentation varied, with fever present in only 16% of neonates compared with 72% of older children. A history of invasive procedure was common, with 32% having had intravascular lines and 13% having undergone surgery. 62% of patients for whom data were available were receiving high-dependency care (46% in SCBU/NICU and 16% in PICU). Of 93 MRSA isolates studied, 73% belonged to epidemic strains widely associated with nosocomial infection in the UK and Ireland.MRSA bacteraemia in children was relatively uncommon and was predominantly seen in very young children, often those receiving neonatal or paediatric intensive care. Bacteraemia predominantly involved well-documented epidemic strains of MRSA associated with nosocomial infection.
- Published
- 2010
38. Panton-Valentine Leucocidin-related disease in England and Wales
- Author
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Mark Ganner, I.M. Smith, Matthew J. Ellington, Claire Perry, Angela Kearns, and Barry Cookson
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Microbiology (medical) ,Adult ,Male ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Adolescent ,Bacterial Toxins ,Prevalence ,Exotoxins ,MRSA ,Disease ,MSSA ,Leukocidins ,Environmental health ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Child ,Aged ,Wales ,business.industry ,Outbreak ,Infant ,General Medicine ,respiratory system ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Middle Aged ,Staphylococcal Infections ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Case ascertainment ,Infectious Diseases ,England ,Child, Preschool ,Panton valentine leucocidin ,Healthcare settings ,bacteria ,PVL ,Female ,Panton–Valentine leukocidin ,business - Abstract
Within the framework of the Health Protection Agency's programme of enhanced surveillance of Staphylococcus aureus with Panton–Valentine Leucocidin (PVL-SA) in England and Wales conducted during 2005–2006, we identified 720 PVL-SA, representing a two-fold increase between 2005 (n = 224) and 2006 (n = 496). The number of PVL-methicillin-resistant S. aureus rose from 119 to 159 in that period. Isolates were referred by 112 centres and included outbreaks of PVL-related disease in community and healthcare settings. One hundred individuals had systemic disease symptoms. Planned systematic surveillance-based studies aim to better address the question of whether these increases reflect an increasing prevalence of PVL-SA and/or improved case ascertainment of PVL-related syndromes.
- Published
- 2009
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