Title: MRSA International Lessons Learned
1MRSA International Lessons Learned?
- Michael Millar
- Barts and the London NHS Trust
- UK
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3Meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
- Resistant to ß-lactam antibiotics
- (penicillins, cephalosporins, carbapenems)
- Staphylococcal cassette chromosome (SCCmec)
inserted in to MSSA ? MRSA - The mecA gene ? PBP2A, which has a reduced
affinity for ß-lactam antibiotics - MRSA can still synthesise a cell wall in the
presence of ß-lactam antibiotics
4Staphylococcus aureus infection
- Staphylococcus aureus has been and remains a
common cause of wound, biomedical device
associated and blood stream infection - MRSA infection is (still) most commonly
hospital-acquired and arises post-procedure
5What have we learned?
- Antibiotic resistant S.aureus are bad for
patients because - Current preventive and treatment strategies for
Staphylococcus aureus infection are compromised
by the emergence of antibiotic resistant strains -
6What have we learned?
- Better diagnostics
- Better treatments
- Better understanding of pathogenesis
- and of epidemiology
- Better prevention??
7What have we learned?
- MRSA can be controlled
- Contrast Denmark in 1970 with today
- Variation in prevalence country to country
- Variation within country
- (Prevalence 3 Perth, 35 Sydney)
8 Hajo Grundmann et al., Emergence and
resurgence of meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus as a public-health threat. Lancet 2006
368 87485
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10Global burden of MRSA
- MRSA is at present the most commonly identified
antibiotic-resistant pathogen in many parts of
the world, including Europe, - the Americas, North Africa, Middle-East, and
East Asia - Grundmann et al.
- Lancet 368 874-885, 2006
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12What have we learned?
- Dictionary Definition of
- Learned
- gained much knowledge
- acquired skill by study, instruction or
experience?
13MRSA some gaps in what we have learned
- Which control strategies are most cost-effective?
- How to change human behaviour?
- How to predict the future?
14What have we learned?
- We hardly need to call readers attention to
the thousands of articles published over the last
three decades about epidemiological and
microbiological aspects of MRSA. Yet uncertainty
remains about the best approach to prevent and
control this worldwide plague - Harbarth Pittet
- Lancet Infect Dis 5661-2. 2005
15MRSA some gaps in what we have learned
- Which control strategies are effective and which
are the most cost-effective? - Screening (/- rapid testing)
- Decontamination
- Isolation
- Information/knowledge/understanding
- Hand-washing
- Antibiotic policies/restriction(s)
- Probiotics
-
16MRSA some gaps in what we have learned
- How do we change human behaviour?
-
- If we know that we have a problem and
- we know what to do to prevent or control the
problem then why dont we do it? - This problem applies at all levels
- national to individual
- Contrast Holland with UK
- Variation in hand hygiene practices
17MRSA in the USA
- Given the considerable body of evidence that
screening cultures, when combined with contact
precautions, are beneficial and cost-effective,
it is disconcerting that only 30 (of ID
physicians) worked in facilities where screening
cultures are routinely done - Boyce. Lancet Infect Dis 5 653-4, 2005
18MRSA in Holland
- there have been neither legal nor ethical qualms
about the Dutch search, isolate, and destroy
strategy., all see the value in prevention - the experience is almost invariably one of
excellent cooperation, and most people involved
enjoy the process of working for the greater
good - Vandenbrouke-Grauls
- Lancet Infect Dis 5 660-1, 2005
19MRSA in the UK
- Problem with MRSA recognised very late
- Mandatory reporting of MRSA blood stream
infections since April 2001 - Targets for reductions of gt50 by 2008
- Enhanced surveillance since 2006
- Increasing regulation
20A new addition links to these documents on the
first screen
21Drop-down for selecting MRSA or MSSA (not yet
available)
A link to the new voluntary pages (not yet
available)
New field
New field A free text box for any additional
comments
22Mandatory MRSA bacteraemia surveillance trends
(Apr 2001 September 2005)
Red significant above line
increase Blue not significant below line
decrease
23Mandatory MRSA bacteraemia surveillance trends
(Apr 2001 September 2005)
Red significant above line
increase Blue not significant below line
decrease
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26MRSA in Finland
- Ten fold increase in MRSA isolates from 1997-2004
(1458 isolates) - Problems in elderly care settings and community
- Increased emphasis on control since 2005 ?
reduced numbers of isolates - 30 of MRSA were CA-MRSA in 2005
- Newer epidemic strains non-multiresistant with
SCCmec types IV, V, or nontypeable - (from Vainio et al. ESCMID, April 2007)
27MRSA some gaps in what we have learned
-
- How to predict the future?
- How much of a threat are Community MRSA and is
there a historical parallel with penicillin
resistant MSSA? - Will VRSA become common-place?
- Are local solutions going to succeed in the face
of a global pandemic? -
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29BSAC Working party definitions (consultation)
- CA-MRSA are MRSA strains isolated from patients
in an outpatient or community setting, or within
48 hours of hospital admission, who have no
previous history of MRSA infection or
colonisation, no history of hospitalisation,
surgery, dialysis or residence in a long term
care facility within one year of the MRSA culture
date, and absence of an indwelling catheter or
percutaneous device at the time of culture. - HA-MRSA are MRSA strains that are transmitted to
and circulate between individuals who have had
contact with health care facilities.
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31Mode of action of PVL
32How CA MRSA evolves
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34Proposed definitions of CA-MRSA. BC Millar et
al., JHI 2007
35Figure 1. Overall rate of hospital-onset
methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
bacteremia for the period 20002006. Rates of
infection with community genotype (CG) and
hospital genotype (HG) strains, as inferred by
the phenotypic rule (see Methods), are shown.
From Popovich et al. CID 46 787-794, 2008
36MRSA - what we have learned
- Staphylococcus aureus is an adaptable pathogen
- Antibiotic resistance is probably only one
manifestation of recent adaptations - Hospital MRSA can be controlled, although the
most cost-effective strategy for control remains
uncertain
37MRSA rates vary
- Why?
- .uneven control and isolation measures, hand
hygiene practices, antibiotic prescribing
behaviours, and allocation of resources. Cultural
and economic factors pervade all aspects of MRSA
control, which can only be successful if strict
measures and policies are installed at an early
stage of MRSA dissemination.. - Harbath and Pittet, Lancet, 2005
38MRSA control
- Screening combined with actions to control
dissemination - Decontamination
- Cohorting / isolation
- Hand hygiene
- Information
- Antibiotic policies
39The precautionary principle
- When there are threats of serious or
irreversible consequences, lack of full
scientific certainty shall not be used as a
reason for postponing cost-effective measures to
control the spread of disease - Perhaps a principle that should be adopted
globally with respect to MRSA control?