Decreasing incidence of Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia over 9 years: Greatest decline in community-associated methicillin-susceptible and hospital-acquired methicillin-resistant isolates

Background The impact of community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) emergence on the epidemiology of S aureus bacteremia (SAB) is not well documented. Methods This was an observational study of adult (aged ≥18 years) inpatients with SAB in a single 808-bed teaching ho...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of infection control 2013-03, Vol.41 (3), p.210-213
Hauptverfasser: Khatib, Riad, MD, Sharma, Mamta, MD, Iyer, Sugantha, MD, Fakih, Mohamad G., MD, Obeid, Karam M., MD, Venugopal, Anilrudh, MD, Fishbain, Joel, MD, Johnson, Leonard B., MD, Segireddy, Madhuri, MD, Jose, Jinson, MD, Riederer, Kathleen, BS, MT
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background The impact of community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) emergence on the epidemiology of S aureus bacteremia (SAB) is not well documented. Methods This was an observational study of adult (aged ≥18 years) inpatients with SAB in a single 808-bed teaching hospital during 2002-2003, 2005-2006, 2008-2009, and 2010 with period-stratified SAB rate, onset mode, patient characteristics, and outcome. Results We encountered a total of 1,098 cases over the entire study period. The rate decreased steadily over time (from 6.64/103 discharges in 2002-2003 to 6.49/103 in 2005-2006, 5.24/103 in 2008-2009, and 5.00/103 in 2010; P  = .0001), with a greater decline in community-associated cases (0.99/103 , 0.77/103 , 0.58/103 , and 0.40/103 , respectively; P  = .0005) compared with health care–associated cases (5.65/103 , 5.72/103 , 4.66/103 , and 4.60/103 , respectively; P  = .005). The decline was principally in MSSA (3.11/103 , 2.21/103 , 2.24/103 , and 1.75/103 , respectively; P  = .00006), including both community-associated ( P  = .0002) and health care–associated cases ( P  = .006). Although overall rate changes in MRSA were not significant ( P  = .09), hospital-onset MRSA decreased markedly ( P < .00001), whereas CA-MRSA increased ( P  = .03). The all-cause 100-day mortality rate did not change significantly (25.6% for 2002-2003, 25.2% for 2005-2006, 28.1% for 2008-2009, and 32.2% for 2010; P  = .10). Differences in MSSA/MRSA-associated mortality decreased (20.1% vs 30.6%, P  = .03 for 2002-2003; 18.1% vs 28.9%, P  = .05 for 2005-2006; 21.7% vs 32.9%, P  = .05 for 2008-2009; and 29.3% vs 34.9, P  = .5 for 2010). Conclusions SAB incidence is decreasing, with the greatest decline in community-associated MSSA and hospital-onset MRSA cases. Most health care–associated cases currently are community-onset. MRSA/MSSA-related mortality is comparable. These changes are likely related to the emergence of CA-MRSA and the inpatient-to-outpatient shift in health care.
ISSN:0196-6553
1527-3296
DOI:10.1016/j.ajic.2012.03.038