Staphylococcus aureus Resistant to Vancomycin - United
States, 2002
The CDC MMWR, July 5th, 2002
The July 5th edition of the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention's (CDC) Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR)
contains the report of the first documented case of infection caused
by vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus. aureus (VRSA).
Following is a summary of that report:
S.aureus is the most common cause of hospital-acquired
infections. The first clinical isolate of this pathogen that had
a reduced susceptibility to vancomycin ("vancomycin-intermediate"
S. aureus, or VISA) was reported in Japan in 1996. As of
June 2002, eight patients in the United States have been confirmed
as having clinical infections caused by VISA. This report describes
the first documented case of infection by vancomycin-resistant S.
aureus (VRSA), which was isolated from a swab received from
that patient in June 2002.
The patient was a dialysis patient who had received
multiple courses of antibiotics since April 2001 for chronic foot
ulcers, and had an MRSA bacteremia in April 2002 associated with
a hemodialysis graft. In June 2002, a swab of an infected foot ulcer
yielded VRE, K. oxytoca and vancomycin-resistant S.
aureus (VRSA). MICs to vancomycin and teicoplanin were 128
and 32 µg/ml, respectively, and analysis at the CDC identified
that the isolate contained the vanA gene.
Epidemiologic and laboratory investigations are under
way to assess the risk for transmission of VRSA to other patients,
health-care workers, and other contacts. To date, no VRSA transmission
has been identified.
This is the first description of what microbiologists
and infection control staff have been dreading for a decade: the
acquisition of the vanA gene, most likely from a VRE, by
and MRSA strain. That this is the first isolate identified hopefully
means that such acquisition is rare; however, it also means that
it may occur. Its existence should give new impetus to programs
in Canada to reduce the incidence of both MRSA and VRE and minimize
opportunities for the emergence of this resistance. It also emphasizes
the need within microbiology laboratories to continue surveillance
for vancomycin resistance in S. aureus, particularly in
high-risk patients. As always, the isolation of S. aureus with confirmed
or presumptive vancomycin resistance should be reported immediately
through local and provincial health departments to the Population
and Public Health Branch of Health Canada.
The full report on Vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus can be downloaded in a PDF form of the entire MMWR newsletter
here,
and viewed in HTML form on the CDC website here.
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