Title: MRSA Skin Infections
1MRSA Skin Infections HIV Overview Strategies
for Clinical Management
- Kevin T. Belasco, DO, MS (Pharmacology)
- Resident, Dermatology
- Sun Coast Hospital, Largo, FL
2Disclosure of Financial Relationships
- This speaker has no significant financial
relationships with commercial entities to
disclose.
This slide set has been peer-reviewed to ensure
that there are no conflicts of interest
represented in the presentation.
3Objectives
- Epidemiology of community-acquired methicillin
resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) skin
infections - Brief history of CA-MRSA
- Virulence factors and CA-MRSA
- Review of treatment of CA-MRSA including newer
agents in the pipeline - Practice guidelines
- Treatment issues in HIV-infected patients
- Decolonization protocols
4Introduction
- CA-MRSA has existed for more than a decade but
recently has emerged as an important worldwide
pathogen - Outbreaks in the US occur in both rural and urban
settings but are often clustered in small
geographic areas - Roughly 85 of CA-MRSA infections present in the
skin subcutaneous tissue, usually as abscesses
or folliculitis
5Introduction
- CA-MRSA clones with multiple antibiotic
resistance are emerging in Asia - Typical presentation of skin infection is a
spontaneous abscess - Genes for CA-MRSA resistance are typically
carried by staphylococcal chromosomal cassette
mec type IVa - 5 major lineages and numerous clones of MRSA have
evolved
6CA-MRSA Who is at risk?
- Commonly infects the young and the healthy,
especially those who live in crowded conditions
or in close physical contact - Median age of CA-MRSA was 23 years in one cohort
study from Minnesota vs. 68 years for health-care
associated MRSA
7Groups with a higher incidence of CA-MRSA
infection
- Athletes
- Military personnel
- MSM
- Prison inmates
- IV drug users
- Homeless persons
- Native Americans
- Pacific Islanders
- Children in day care programs
Adapted from Elston, JAAD, 2007 56(1) 1-16
8Incidence of MRSA On the rise
- In 2000, the US National Nosocomial Infections
Surveillance System reported that more than 50 S
aureus isolates from ICUs were resistant to
methicillin - One recent study of patients admitted to VA
hospitals in Maryland found that 42 of 993 s
aureus blood cultures grew MRSA. 60 of the
infections were acquired during hospitalization
Roghmann M, et.al. J Hosp Infect 20055927-32
9History of MRSA
- 1959- Methicillin first introduced clinically
- 1961- MRSA first described in the UK
- 1993- First report of CA-MRSA in Australia
- 2002-CA-MRSA gains national attention after
outbreaks in correctional facilities and among
athletic teams in Los Angeles - In 1974, MRSA infections accounted for two
percent of the total number of staph infections
in 1995 it was 22 in 2004 it approached 63
www.cdc.gov
10CA-MRSA HIV
- Male homosexual community represents another
population at particular risk for CA-MRSA - In a cohort of HIV-infected adults with MRSA, 60
of the isolates cultured between 2000 and 2003
were community-acquired, with a six-fold increase
over the 4-year period
Matthews WC, et.al. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr
200540155-60
11Independent predictors of CA-MRSA
- HIV transmission among MSM or by injection drug
use - CD4 count
- Absence of clotrimoxazole prophylaxis
Matthews WC, et.al. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr
200540155-60
12(No Transcript)
13Health care-associated MRSA vs.
Community-acquired MRSA
- HA-MRSA seen predominantly in setting of
hospital/nursing home/dialysis center - HA-MRSA predominates among chronically ill or
immunosuppressed patients - In contrast, CA-MRSA predominates among healthy,
young persons - Incubation period is variable 4-10 days
14MRSA What are the origins?
- HA-MRSA is positively associated with the use of
broad-spectrum antibiotics, including
cephalosporins and fluoroquinolones - CA-MRSA has not been associated with any specific
antibiotic usage pattern (with possible exception
of amoxicillin in children)
15CA-MRSA Isolates
- Type IV staphylococcal chromosomal cassette
mec-bearing isolates predominate in CA-MRSA - The genome sequence of the prototypic CA-MRSA
strain, MW2, includes the cassette mec type IVa ?
genes only for methicillin resistance - Type II cassette mec-bearing isolates predominate
in HA-MRSA
16Need to genotype MRSA isolates?
- At the present time, there is no information to
suggest that molecular typing or identification
of toxin genes should impact clinical management
decisions CDC Clinical Management of MRSA
Report, March 2006
17Clinical Presentation of MRSA
- In a study of ER patients in Oakland, California,
MRSA was present in 51 of cultured skin and
soft-tissue infections. Of 137 subjects included
in the study, 63 presented with a deep or
superficial abscess - Strongest predictor of MRSA was presence of a
fruruncle - Rarely, CA-MRSA may present as a necrotizing
fasciitis, more commonly presents as an abscess
or may be mistaken for a spider bite
From Frazee BW, et.al. Ann Emerg Med
200545311-20
18Transmission of HA-MRSA
- The main mode of transmission between patients is
through human hands, especially healthcare
workers' hands. - Hands may become contaminated with MRSA bacteria
by contact with infected or colonized patients.
- If appropriate hand hygiene such as washing with
soap and water or using an alcohol-based hand
sanitizer is not performed, the bacteria can be
spread when the healthcare worker touches other
patients.
19Additional modes of transmission?
- Contamination of the food supply represents a
potential mode of transmission of CA-MRSA. In
Japan, MRSA has been isolated from retail raw
chicken meat
Kitai S, et.al. J Vet Med Sci 200567107-10
20Crossover of MRSA Between Community Health Care
Settings
- The distinction between hospital-acquired and
community-acquired MRSA has been blurred - CA-MRSA prevalence may be as high as 37 among
total hospital MRSA cases
21Virulence Factors in MRSA
- CA-MRSA infection is much more likely to progress
to clinical infection than is MSSA colonization - Panton-Valentine leukocidin is the major
virulence factor among CA-MRSA strains - Coinfection with influenza correlates with poor
clinical outcome - Pulmonary infection with CA-MRSA results in
severe morbidity
22Pulmonary disease CA-MRSA
- CA-MRSA Pulmonary Syndrome is a distinct clinical
entity that affects lungs and bones. It often
affects children and may be fatal. Pneumonia,
empyema, and septic emboli are among the more
common pulmonary manifestations. - Patients with abscess and folliculitis rarely
develop the CA-MRSA pulmonary sx
23Treatment Options in MRSA Key Points
- Primary treatment for CA-MRSA is abscess drainage
- Many immunocompetent patients may respond to
drainage alone - Failure to drain the abscess may have deleterious
consequences, even if effective antibiotics are
prescribed
24Necrotizing Fasciitis and MRSA
- HIV infection represents an independent risk
factor for development of necrotizing fasciitis
in CA-MRSA - Additional risk factors for necrotizing fasciitis
include previous MRSA infection, diabetes,
intravenous drug use, hepatitis C, and malignancy
25Surgical drainage alone as a therapeutic option
in HIV patients with MRSA?
- Commonly used beta-lactam antibiotics do not
provide adequate coverage of CA-MRSA - In a large study from SF General Hospital
involving 6,156 patients, published in 2004,
positive clinical outcomes were seen among MRSA
patients treated with abscess drainage alone or
concomitant therapy with penicillins inactive
against MRSA ? a significant percentage of these
patients were HIV-positive - These findings suggest that HIV infection alone
does not require a different therapeutic approach
Young DM. Arch Surg 2004139947-51
26Key Points
- Surgical drainage, rather than antibiotic
therapy, is the single most important
intervention for a CA-MRSA abscess, even in the
presence of HIV infection - Unlike most strains of HA-MRSA, CA-MRSA isolates
are often susceptible to several non-beta-lactam
drug classes
27- Previous antibiotic therapy with ß-lactams, low
CD4 cell count, and multiple hospital admissions
in the previous year were independent predictors
for the development of MRSA bacteremia among 129
HIV-positive patients studied in Italy in 2002 - Based on our statistical evaluation, we are also
confident to stress that the antibiotic
restriction policy suggested for high-risk
patients to prevent and control the spread of
MRSA bacteremia should also include HIV-infected
patients
Tumbarello M, et.al. J Antimicrob Therap 2002
50 375-382
28Antibiotic therapy in CA-MRSA
- Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole remains an
inexpensive and effective choice for the majority
of patients, including those infected with HIV - Tetracyclines remain effective for many strains
- For seriously ill patients, linezolid may be
superior to vancomycin
29Resistance to sulfas among large HIV populations?
- Concern has been raised that sulfa use for
pneumocystis prophylaxis may promote resistance
in areas with large HIV populations - Evidence-based medicine suggests otherwise 100
of MRSA isolates in a study in Oakland,
California were susceptible to TMP-SMX, while
only 86 were sensitive to tetracycline still,
more studies are needed
Frazee BW, et.al.Ann Emerg Med 200545311-20
30Clindamycin Resistance in MRSA?
- Inducible resistance to lincosamides (lincomycin,
clindamycin) is growing macrolide resistance may
be a marker for inducible lincosamide resistance
? detection of erythromycin-resistant and
clindamycin-susceptible CA-MRSA is key best
achieved by so-called erythromycin-clindamycin
D-zone test in vitro - Clindamycin has proven effective in management of
invasive CA-MRSA
31Addditional therapeutic pearls in CA-MRSA
Rifampin Quinolones
- Rifampin has been used in combination with other
antibiotics but should never be used alone to
treat staphylococcal infection - Fluoroquinolone use favors the emergence of MRSA
as well as quinolone-resistant Pseudomonas and
uropathogens ? caution therefore needed in
utilization of quinolones for staphylococcal
infection
32Vancomycin
- Glycopeptide antibiotic, long used as a mainstay
for MRSA - Good safety profile and structurally dissimilar
to beta-lactams, so can be used in those allergic
to such antibiotics - No Gram-negative coverage
- Rarely may induce reversible marrow suppression,
also red man syndrome - Prolonged IV infusion over at least 1 hr
33Teicoplanin
- Glycopeptide antibiotic like vancomycin
- Not available in the US
- Fewer side effects than vancomycin ? no red man
syndrome - Available as intramuscular injection or IV
loading dose BID
34Quinupristin-Dalfopristin
- Useful choice in vancomycin-resistant strains
- Resistance remains rare in the US
- Ineffective against Enterococcus faecalis
- Potent inhibitor of cytochrome P-450
- Arthralgias and myalgias seen in greater than 20
patients, also nausea/vomiting - Resistance increasing abroad, including up to 31
of MRSA strains in a Taiwanese study from 2000
35Daptomycin
- Lipopeptide antibiotic
- Approved by FDA in 2003 for MRSA/VRSA
- Not recommended for pulmonary infections due to
reduced penetration in lung tissue - Displays rapid concentration-dependent killing
daily dosing
36Linezolid
- Useful for severe refractory MRSA, including
severe skin and soft-tissue infections and
pneumonia - Can be administered orally or intravenously with
100 bioavailability - Commonly causes GI side effects and rarely causes
thrombocytopenia and myelosuppression - Good alternative to vancomycin in
renally-impaired patients - Indicated for the treatment of adults and
children with MRSA and vancomycin-resistant
enterococcal infections involving skin, soft
tissue, or lungs.
37Tigecycline
- Derived from minocycline
- Approved by FDA in 2005 for complicated skin and
skin structure infections (cSSSI), including
MRSA, and complicated intra-abdominal infections
(cIAI) - Long-term studies needed to establish anti-MRSA
activity
38Ceftobiprole
- Novel broad-spectrum cephalosporin active in
vitro against MRSA - Current clinical trials underway
- Also active against Pseudomonas and other
Gram-negative organisms - Not active against VRE or VRSA
39MRSA and HIV
- HIV patients have a 18-fold higher risk for
CA-MRSA than the general population, according to
a study presented in abstract form at the XVI
International AIDS Conference in Toronto 8/06 - According to the study, risk factors for CA-MRSA
include use of ß-lactams and high-risk sexual
activity (as evidenced by positive syphilis
serology)
Crum-Cianflone N. et.al. Increasing rates of
CA-MRSA among HIV-infected patients. Abstract.
XVI International AIDS Conference. Toronto August
2006
40MRSA and HIV
- The annual incidence of MRSA in 2005 among 425
HIV patients studied was 40 cases/1000
person-years compared to 741 cases/325,000 (or
2.28/1000) among HIV-negative persons (18 fold
higher rate). All HIV-infected patients developed
soft-tissue infections, 16 required
hospitalization, 67 had a positive nares
cultures, 0 were taking Septra prophylaxis, and
56 HAART. Sixteen percent had relapsing MRSA
infections despite appropriate initial
antibiotics.
41Novel Treatments for MRSA The Pipleine
- Dalbavancin lipoglycopeptide with prolonged
half-life (up to 300 hrs), may be dosed weekly
not yet used outside of clinical trials - Telavancin lipoglycopepdtide, has also shown
efficacy against MRSA in clinical trials
42Novel Treatments for MRSA The Pipeline
- Oritavancin glycopeptide currently under Phase
III clinical trials similar activity to
vancomycin with extended activity against VRSA
once daily IV dosing - Ramoplanin novel glycolipodepsipeptide that
blocks peptidoglycan synthesis po dosing for
enteric VRE infections, not useful for
blood-borne or cutaneous infections (unstable in
bloodstream)
43Prevention of Recurrent MRSA Infection Key
Points
- CA-MRSA skin infections recur at a high rate
- Skin surface and fomite colonization appear to be
at least as important as nasal colonization - Alcohol-based disinfectants may be superior to
detergent-based formulations
From Elston DM. JAAD. 2007 56(1) 1-116
44How to obtain a culture for MRSA from nares or
groin
- Moisten a cotton-tipped culture swab (charcoal
transport swab) with sterile saline or sterile
water - Insert the swab into the anterior nares (and gently rotate it
- Using the same swab, repeat the procedure in the
other nostril - Moisten a second cotton tipped swab as above
- Roll or rub the cotton tip over the skin in the
groin area - Using the same swab, repeat the procedure on the
other groin
45Decolonization
- Elimination of MRSA carrier state through use of
infection control measures and/or antibiotics.
This decreases the risk of transmission to
high-risk individuals (immunocompromised or
otherwise highly susceptible persons) or to
others in an outbreak situation.
46Decolonization and HIV
- The effectiveness of permanent decolonization
seems marginal, but special circumstances may
warrant an attempt. Examples of special
circumstances include patients who are
immunosuppressed and colonized, and therefore,
might develop particularly serious infections - Decolonization protocols may include the use of
oral/topical antibiotics
47Colonization Who is at Risk?
- People at increased risk for colonization are
those with wounds, catheters, drains and
non-intact skin. Immunosuppressed patients are
also at increased risk of MRSA colonization
48MRSA Decolonization Protocols
- Decolonization protocol consists of a ten-day
course of mupirocin ointment to both nares and
daily showers (skin and hair) with a
chlorhexidine soap, plus trimethoprim-sulfamethoxa
zole (double strength) twice daily for 5 days - 70 ethanol hand sanitizers also effective in
spread of CA-MRSA - TMP-SMX is not FDA-approved for the treatment of
any staph. infection but case reports speak to
its empiric success
49Body scrubs for MRSA
- Chlorhexidine (Hibiclens)
- effective for both Gram() and Gram(-) organisms
- bacteriostatic bactericidal
- Use with caution on the face do not use near
eyes (corneal ulceration) or ear canal (linked to
ototoxicity ? deafness) - Hexachlorophene (pHisoHex)
- commonly used body scrub for MRSA
- Bacteriostatic Category C in pregnancy
50MRSA Decolonization Evidence-based medicine
- 1996 Spanish decolonization study with 192 MRSA
patients treated with TMP-SMX bid x 5 days
Rifampin 600 mg qd ? MRSA eradication seen in
64.2 patients by day 9 with 65.3 probability of
remaining MRSA-free 32 days after completion of
treatment - STUDY LIMITATIONS Use of rifampin (not
recommended), lack of use of mupirocin, lack of
long-term follow-up, patient population was
inpatient hospitalized (ie, HA-MRSA vs. CA-MRSA)
From Harbarth S et.al. Clin.Infect.Dis. 2000
Dec31(6) 1380-5
51Factors in MRSA Decolonization Failure
- Absence of mupirocin treatment
- Previous fluoroquinolone therapy
- 2 MRSA-positive body sites
- Mupirocin resistance
- Lack of patient compliance
- Lack of patient education
52Decolonization Which Protocol is Best?
- The effectiveness of decolonization therapy of
any kind for preventing S. aureus infections in
individual patients has not been
well-established CDC Strategies for Clinical
Management of MRSA, Released March 2006 - Decolonization regimens are not sufficiently
effective to warrant routine use
53Conclusions
- Consider inpatient treatment and observation for
all high-risk persons, including HIV patients and
pregnant women - Pus-containing lesions suggest CA-MRSA
- Primary treatment for MRSA abscess remains
drainage - Sulfa drugs are an appropriate choice for most
uncomplicated CA-MRSA infections requiring oral
antibiotic therapy
54Conclusions
- Decolonization protocols may be warranted in
cases of recurrent MRSA infection, close physical
contact with infected persons, and
immunocompromised (HIV) patients at risk for
increased morbidity/mortality - No single decolonization protocol has proven
superior and evidenced-based recommendations are
lacking
55Conclusions
- Fluoroquinolones have been effective therapies in
the past but resistance to MRSA is emerging and
use is discouraged - Additional oral and parenteral agents are
indicated in complicated MRSA infection and in
severely ill, hospitalized patients
56Conclusions
- HIV disease represents an independent risk factor
for severe, disseminated MRSA infection and
complications such as necrotizing fasciitis - Still, resistance to sulfas among HIV-patients
appears to remain low and these agents may still
prove effective in management of CA-MRSA in the
HIV-positive populations
57Conclusion
- Both physician and patient awareness of MRSA
infection, including risk factors, preventative
methods, and treatment options, remains paramount
for appropriate clinical management and reduction
of spread of CA-MRSA
58References
- Elston DM. J Am. Acad. Dermatol. 2007 Jan 56(1)
1-16 - Roghmann M, et.al. J Hosp Infect 20055927-32
- Matthews WC, et.al. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr
200540155-60 - CDC Clinical Management of MRSA Report, March
2006 www.cdc.gov - Frazee BW, et.al. Ann Emerg Med 200545311-20
- Kitai S, et.al. J Vet Med Sci 200567107-10
- Young DM. Arch Surg 2004139947-51
- Tumbarello M, et.al. J Antimicrob Therap 2002
50 375-382 - Harbarth S et.al. Clin.Infect.Dis. 2000
Dec31(6) 1380-5 - Scheinfeld N. J. Drugs in Dermatol. 2007 Jan
6(1) 97-103 - Crum-Cianflone N. et.al. Increasing rates of
CA-MRSA among HIV-infected patients. Abstract.
XVI International AIDS Conference. Toronto August
2006