Issue: December 2015
November 10, 2015
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MSSA-associated infections, deaths occur more often than MRSA in NICU

Issue: December 2015
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Methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus caused more infections and deaths in a neonatal intensive care unit than MRSA, while both strains were found to have similar mortality rates after infection in a recent study.

Perspective from David A. Kaufman, MD

S. aureus infections are associated with increased mortality and morbidity and longer hospital stays, but data on the burden of S. aureus disease in hospitalized infants are limited.” Daniel K. Benjamin Jr., MD, PhD, faculty associate director of the Duke Clinical Research Institute at Duke University School of Medicine, and colleagues wrote. “Our findings confirm results of earlier studies demonstrating that MSSA infections are more common than MRSA infections.”

Daniel K. Benjamin Jr.

Benjamin and colleagues conducted a retrospective study of 3,888 neonates with invasive S. aureus infections discharged from 348 NICUs from 1997 through 2012. Study findings revealed that of all patients discharged from NICUs (n = 887,910), 0.4% were diagnosed with an invasive S. aureus infection. Of the 3,978 S. aureus infections, MSSA accounted for 72.1% of them. The proportion of infections caused by MRSA increased annually, between 1997 and 2006, then decreased between 2006 and 2012.

There were more deaths associated with invasive MSSA infections (237 vs. 110) than MRSA. The mortality rate for both groups, however, was similar at 9.6% in infants with MSSA vs. 11.9% in infants with MRSA (P = .05).

Benjamin and colleagues suggested broadening the scope of S. aureus prevention to target both types of infection.

“Consideration should be given to expanding hospital infection control efforts targeting MRSA to include MSSA as well,” they wrote. “Future studies to better define the relationship between MSSA colonization and subsequent infection will help to clarify the importance of such interventions for preventing MSSA disease.”

In a related editorial, Joseph B. Cantey, MD, of the department of pediatrics at Texas A&M Health Science Center, and colleagues wrote that while targeted surveillance of specific pathogens would be effective at reducing infections, it could result in unnecessary workloads and costs.

“The key to minimizing morbidity and mortality from any organism (S. aureus included) must be prevention of horizontal transmission that can result in NICU outbreaks,” Cantey and colleagues wrote. “We know that horizontal transmission occurs via the hands of health care workers, so hand hygiene as part of standard and transmission-based precautions remains the main stay of prevention. Unlike decolonization practices that focus on a specific organism, hand hygiene provides protection against all pathogens.” – by David Costill

Disclosure: Benjamin reports receiving research support from Cempra Pharmaceuticals.