Title: Staphylococcal Infections Among Injection Drug Users
1Staphylococcal Infections Among Injection Drug
Users
- Frederick L. Altice, M.D.
- Professor of Medicine
- Yale University School of Medicine
2Background
- 13 million IDUs estimated worldwide 1
- Skin and soft tissue infections are the leading
cause for ER visits and hospitalizations for IDUs
(S aureus S pyogenes most common pathogens) 2 - S aureus nasal carriage occurs in 20 of people
and associated with development of community- and
nosocomial-acquired S aureus infections 3,4 - IDUs have a higher rate of S aureus colonization
than the general population 3,5 - S aureus nasal carriage has been associated with
? development of subsequent infections in IDUs 5
1. UNODC, 2004 2. Palepu, CMAJ 2001 3.
Kluytmans, Clin Micro Rev 1997 4. von Eiff, NEJM
2001 5. Basetti, Infection 2004
3S Aureus Expresses Many Potential Virulence
Factors
- Surface proteins that promote colonization of
host tissues - Factors that probably inhibit phagocytosis
(capsule, immunoglobulin binding protein A) - Toxins that damage host tissues and cause disease
symptoms - Coagulase-negative staphylococci are normally
less virulent and express fewer virulence factors - S epidermidis readily colonizes implanted devices
4Skin and Soft Tissue Infections (SSTIs) Among IDUs
- Include local (cellulitis abscesses) and
necrotizing (complicated abscesses, necrotizing
fasciitis, pyomyositis, myonecrosis) SSTIs - Most common organisms are S aureus gt S pyogenes gt
polymicrobial infections - Related to local tissue trauma, direct effect of
drugs, tissue ischemia and inoculation of
bacteria - Increased risks skin popping, use of
non-sterile needles, speedballs, booting,
licking the needle - Decreased risks use of alcohol preparation of
skin - Unclear association HIV and immunosuppression
Ebright, ID Clin NA, 2002
5Skin and Soft Tissue Infections
6Invasive Infections Among IDUs
- Most common cause is S aureus gtgt Strep gtgtgtgt GNRs
- Most commonly include bacteremia from local
source (lungs, SSTIs), endocarditis and
osteomyelitis - Endocarditis more likely to be Right-Sided among
IDUs than among non-IDUs - Duration of antibiotics is prolonged though some
evidence of shorter duration for right-sided
infections
7Invasive Infections
8Emergence of MRSA
- Hospital-acquired MRSA (h-MRSA)
- Plasmid-mediated
- Not associated with toxin production
- Associated with recent hospitalization and use of
antibiotics - Highly resistant to most oral antibiotics, except
linezolid - Community-acquired MRSA (c-MRSA)
- Chromosomally-mediated
- Associated with toxin production
(Panton-Valentine leukocidin) - Person-to-person transmission and not associated
with traditional risk factors IDUs, sexual
contact and crowding athletes, prisoners,
homeless shelters, day care centers) - Sensitive to many oral antibiotics (TMP/SMZ,
tetracycline, etc.)
9Surveillance of S aureus and MRSA in the United
States
- Colonization 1
- S aureus 89.4 million (32) and MRSA 2.3
million (0.8) - Hospitalization
- ICUs (1974 2 1995 22 2004 64) 2
- 292,000 per year 126,000 (43) due to MRSA 3
- Skin and Soft Tissue Infections
- 12 million outpatient visits per year for SSTIs 4
- 76 of purulent infections in 11 ERs secondary to
S aureus 5 - 78 of these due to MRSA with overall MRSA rate
59 - Invasive Infections 6
- Occurs in 94,000 persons/year
- Mortality 19,000
- 86 are healthcare-associated
1. Kuehnert, JID, 2006 2. Klevens, CID, 2006
3. Kuehnert, Emerg ID, 2005 4. McCaig, Emerging
ID, 2006 5. Moran, NEJM, 2006 6. Klevens, JAMA,
2007
10Staphylococcal Colonization Among IDUs is
Increasing in North America
- Nasal carriage screening in 2000 (N299) and 2006
(N301) among active IDUs in Vancouver - Increase in S aureus colonization 27.1 ? 39.5
- Increase in MRSA colonization 7.4 ? 18.6
- MRSA PFGE changed from primarily USA-500 (100)
to USA-300 (75) with increasing susceptibility
to TMP/SMZ and TCN with USA-300 - Trend toward increased recent antibiotic use
(p.056) and hospitalization (p0.12) for MRSA
vs. MSSA
Al-Rawahi GN, J Clin Microbiol, 2008
11S Aureus Carriage Among IDUs in Methadone and
Heroin Maintenance Programs
- 2001 70 MM and 94 HM patients in Basel,
Switzerland - Nasal carriage higher in MM (43) than in HM
(23) patients - No difference in recent or remote hospitalization
- MM subjects more likely to have used antibiotics
in previous month (12 vs 4), be HIV (20 vs
6) and have no IDU (34 vs 0) - In multivariate analysis, enrolled in MM was the
only significant (AOR 2.27) correlate of S aureus
colonization - No MRSA isolated,1 but subsequent studies have
demonstrated MRSA transmission between drug
users2 and introduction of new MRSA strains3
1. Bassetti, Inf Control Hosp Epi, 2004 2. Qi, J
Clin Micro 2005 3. Fleisch, Infection, 2005
12Colonization with MRSA in Opioid Dependent
Patients
- Case control study of 60 hospitalized opioid
dependent (OD) and 60 non-drug users in Egypt - Subjects with any CDC risk for h-MRSA excluded
(time extended to five years for health care
facility) - Colonization higher in drug vs. non-drug users
(30 vs 10) - Increased risk associated with duration of drug
use and use of non-prescription antibiotics - 58 of active MRSA infections associated with
colonization
El-Sharif, Exp Biol Med, 2008
13Rapid Spread of MRSA in the Netherlands
No. Hospitals with MRSA PFT-16
No. MRSA Isolates
2000
2001
2002
Year
Wannet, J Clin Micro 2004
14Hospitalization and S Aureus
15Managing MRSA Colonization
- Colonization persists for years, despite
treatment of infection - Contact precautions and isolation of wounds
recommended - Controversy exists around universal screening,
isolation and at eradication of the carrier state
16Changing Epidemiology of Staphylococcal Infections
17Summary
- IDUs exist on all continents and are more likely
to be colonized with S aureus - Morbidity and mortality related to S Aureus
infections is greater among IDUs - Colonization with S aureus, including MRSA, is
associated with increased risk for infection - Infection can be reduced with skin cleaning and
sterile syringes - MRSA prevalence is variable but growing in
different regions of the world, thus requiring
increased surveillance to guide clinical practice