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Chlorhexidine and Mupirocin Susceptibility of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus Isolates in the REDUCE-MRSA Trial

Authors :
Rebecca E. Kaganov
Edward Septimus
Katherine Haffenreffer
Mary K. Hayden
Julia Moody
Susan S. Huang
John A. Jernigan
Jason Hickok
Haiying Li
Richard Platt
Robert A. Weinstein
Julie Lankiewicz
Taliser R. Avery
Karen Lolans
Ken Kleinman
Jonathan B. Perlin
Richter, SS
Source :
Journal of clinical microbiology, vol 54, iss 11
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2016.

Abstract

Whether targeted or universal decolonization strategies for the control of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) select for resistance to decolonizing agents is unresolved. The REDUCE-MRSA trial (ClinicalTrials registration no. NCT00980980) provided an opportunity to investigate this question. REDUCE-MRSA was a 3-arm, cluster-randomized trial of either screening and isolation without decolonization, targeted decolonization with chlorhexidine and mupirocin, or universal decolonization without screening to prevent MRSA infection in intensive-care unit (ICU) patients. Isolates from the baseline and intervention periods were collected and tested for susceptibility to chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG) by microtiter dilution; mupirocin susceptibility was tested by Etest. The presence of the qacA or qacB gene was determined by PCR and DNA sequence analysis. A total of 3,173 isolates were analyzed; 2 were nonsusceptible to CHG (MICs, 8 μg/ml), and 5/814 (0.6%) carried qacA or qacB . At baseline, 7.1% of MRSA isolates expressed low-level mupirocin resistance, and 7.5% expressed high-level mupirocin resistance. In a mixed-effects generalized logistic regression model, the odds of mupirocin resistance among clinical MRSA isolates or MRSA isolates acquired in an ICU in intervention versus baseline periods did not differ across arms, although estimates were imprecise due to small numbers. Reduced susceptibility to chlorhexidine and carriage of qacA or qacB were rare among MRSA isolates in the REDUCE-MRSA trial. The odds of mupirocin resistance were no different in the intervention versus baseline periods across arms, but the confidence limits were broad, and the results should be interpreted with caution.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of clinical microbiology, vol 54, iss 11
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1f06c51cb0bf342d52358f4f4b51e99b