Abstract
Background
Colonization with Staphylococcus aureus has been identified as a risk for subsequent occurrence of infection. This study investigated the relationship between S. aureus colonization of patients and healthcare workers (HCWs), and subsequent surgical site infections (SSI).
Methods
Between December 2014 and September 2015, a total of 930 patients and 143 HCWs were enrolled from the Bugando Medical Centre and Sekou Toure hospital in Mwanza, Tanzania. On admission and discharge nasal swabs, with an additional of wound swab for those who developed SSI were collected from patients whereas HCWs were swabbed once. Identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing were done by VITEK-MS and VITEK-2, respectively. Detection of Panton Valentine leukocidin (PVL) and mecA genes was done by PCR. S. aureus isolates were further characterized by spa typing and Multi-Locus Sequence Typing (MLST).
Results
Among 930 patients screened for S. aureus on admission, 129 (13.9%) were positive of which 5.4% (7/129) were methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA). Amongst 363 patients rescreened on discharge, 301 patients had been tested negative on admission of whom 29 (9.6%) turned positive after their hospital stay. Three (10.3%) of the 29 acquired S. aureus were MRSA. Inducible Clindamycin resistance occurred more often among acquired S. aureus isolates than among isolates from admission [34.5% (10/29) vs. 17.1% (22/129), P = 0.018]. S. aureus contributed to 21.1% (n = 12) of the 57 cases of investigated SSIs among 536 patients followed. Seven out of eight S. aureus carriage/infection pairs had the same spa and sequence types. The previously reported dominant PVL-positive ST88 MRSA strain with spa type t690 was detected in patients and HCW.
Conclusion
A significant proportion of patients acquired S. aureus during hospitalization. The finding of more than 90% of S. aureus SSI to be of endogenous source underscores the need of improving infection prevention and control measures including screening and decolonization of high risk patients.
Keywords: S. aureus, Colonization, Surgical site infection, Tanzania
Introduction
Staphylococcus aureus is a human commensal found most commonly in the anterior nares and in other extra-nasal sites such as the perineum, skin, pharynx and in small proportion in the gastrointestinal tract and axillae [1–4]. About 20% of the population is reported to be persistent nasal carriers of S. aureus, 60% are intermittent carriers and about 20% are non-carriers [5]. S. aureus has been implicated in a number of clinical infections ranging from minor skin and soft tissue infections to life threatening conditions such as pneumonia and toxic shock syndrome [6].
Colonization of patients with S. aureus has been linked to the occurrence of subsequent infections [6]. Under the umbrella of exogenous sources of healthcare-associated infections (HCAIs), healthcare workers (HCWs) have been identified as reservoirs and potential niche for cross-transmission of HCAIs causing pathogens [7]. Colonization and acquisition of methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) during hospital stay not only complicate the management of patients but also significantly affects efforts to prevent and control HCAIs [8].
In Tanzania, surgical site infection (SSI) rates range from 10.9 to 26% [9–12] and S. aureus is the most isolated pathogen. Despite the predominance of S. aureus SSI in Tanzania, the link of patients’ colonization and the role of HCWs colonization as possible reservoirs of S. aureus have not yet been established. The current study was done to investigate the role of pre-and post-admission S. aureus colonization among surgical patients in subsequent occurrence of SSI. In parallel, HCWs attending patients in the same surgical wards were also screened for S. aureus nasal colonization to look for evidence of carriers who might act as reservoir and serve as a potential source of S. aureus cross transmission.
Methods
Study design and site
It was a prospective cohort study conducted for a period of 10 months (December 2014–September 2015) at the Bugando Medical Centre (BMC) and Sekou Toure hospital. Sekou Toure is a regional hospital of Mwanza, it has a bed capacity of 300 and well-established operating theatres. BMC has a bed capacity of 1000 and it serves as a zonal referral hospital caring for about 18 million people residing in 10 out of 30 regions of Tanzania. BMC is also a teaching hospital for the Catholic University of Health and Allied Sciences (CUHAS).
Sample size estimation of the SSI survey
Kish’s formula (1965) was used to estimate the sample size assuming an average prevalence of 18.5% from the two short clinical studies on SSI done in Mwanza city in 2010 [12] and 2012 [10] whereby a minimum of 230 patients were to be enrolled. However, considering the design effect of the two sites, the estimated sample size was inflated by 10% which added to 253 as the minimum sample size.
Patients and HCWs
Consented patients admitted for surgery between December 2014 and September 2015 were enrolled into the study. Patients’ social-demographic information and medical history relevant to the study were recorded using a data collection tool. Patients’ nasal swabs were taken before surgery within 48 h of admission to assess S. aureus carriage status before hospital stay. When patients were discharged from the hospital, a second nasal swab was taken to assess S. aureus carriage status during hospital stay (S. aureus acquisition). After surgery, patients were followed up by either a surveillance doctor or a trained nurse to observe the signs of infection at the incision site while in the wards. In case of SSI development pus swabs were taken for microbiological investigations [13]. Discharged patients were followed-up using their mobile phone numbers until either a SSI became apparent or up to 30 days after being operated. Some of the patients whose surgeries involved foreign body implantation were followed-up for 90 days [13].
In parallel, consented HCWs working in surgical wards were also enrolled. A nasal swab was taken only once to assess their S. aureus carriage status.
Sample collection, culture and antimicrobial susceptibility testing
For nasal swabs, sterile cotton tipped swab (Mast Group Ltd., United Kingdom) was moistened in 0.85% sterile saline before swabbing, and then introduced into one nostril (nasal vestibule) to a maximum of 1.5 cm (range swab). The swab was rotated three times around one inner nasal circumference and the same swab was introduced into the second nostril, and the same was repeated as in the first nostril. The swab was inserted into Amies transport medium (Mast Group Ltd., United Kingdom) and transported to the Catholic University of Health and Allied Sciences (CUHAS) laboratory within two hours for processing. For wound infections, the surface of the infected surgical site was first cleaned with normal saline before swabbing [14].
All nasal and wound swabs were inoculated onto Columbia blood agar (OXOID LTD, Basingstoke, Hampshire, England) for S. aureus isolation. The plates were incubated aerobically at 37 °C and examined for growth after 18–24 h. Preliminary S. aureus screening was based on colony morphology i.e. either yellow to golden yellow or creamy-white colonies with or without beta-hemolysis on blood agar [15]. Colony morphology identification was followed by gram-staining, catalase, slide coagulase and DNase tests.
All positive S. aureus isolates were further confirmed by VITEK-MS system (bioMérieux, France).
The antimicrobial susceptibility testing was done using automated VITEK-2 system (bioMérieux, France) following manufacturer’s instructions. Briefly, a standardized inoculum with 0.5 McFarland-standard was made from pure culture. The test tube with the inoculum was placed into the VITEK-2 cassettes at the Smart Carrier Station™ to virtually link the sample and the AST-GP632 (VITEK-2 Card specific for S. aureus). Cefoxitin test for MRSA was performed by Kirby disc diffusion method on Mueller-Hinton E- Agar plates (bioMérieux, France). Isolates with zone of inhibition ≤21 mm were phenotypically considered as MRSA and [16] were confirmed by presence of mecA gene.
Amplification of PVL and mecA genes
Moremi et.al [17], The PVL gene was amplified using lukSF-Forward (5′-ATCATTAGGTAAAATGTCTGGACATGATCCA-3′) and lukSF-Reverse (5′-GCATCAAGTGTATTGGATAGCAAAAGC-3′), whereas mecA1-Forward (5’GTAGAAATGACTGAACGTCCGATAA-3′) and mecA2-Reverse (5′-CCAATTCCACATTGTTTCGGTCTAA-3′) primers were used to amplify mecA gene. The known PVL-positive MRSA isolate VA17763 (spa type t008) was used as a positive control. The PCR reaction was carried out in a 50-μl volume mixture which included 400 nM of each primer, 1X buffer II, 200 μM of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate, 1.5 mM MgCl2, and 2 U of AmpliTaq Gold DNA polymerase (Thermo Scientific™, Darmstadt, Germany) and a 4 μl (OD600 = 0,1) DNA template.
Spa typing and multilocus sequence typing (MLST)
Spa typing and MLST was employed to 60 selected S. aureus isolates of which 58 were from patients and two were from HCWs. The selection of the 60 S. aureus isolates for typing was based on either they are carriage and infection pairs, isolates from other patients (the same cohort in the same ward) admitted either 2 weeks before or after the occurrence of SSI of patients, as well as all MRSA isolates from patients and HCWs.
Spa typing was performed using the primers 1095-Forward (5′-AGACGATCCTTCGGTGA-3′) and 1517-Reverse (5′-GCTTTTGCAATGTCATTTACTG-3′) [18]. The PCR conditions for the primers were; initial denaturation at 95 °C for 10 min, 30 cycles were run with 94°for 30s, annealing at 55°for 30s and extension at 72 °C for 30s each, followed by a final extension step for 10 min at 72 °C. The PCR products’ purification and sequencing were commercially done at Microsynth SeqLab GmbH (Goettingen, Germany). Isolates were assigned to particular spa types using the spa server (http://www.spaserver.ridom.de, Ridom GmbH, Muenster, Germany).
The seven housekeeping genes of the respective bacterial isolates were amplified as per previously described protocol [19]. TraceEdit Pro software (Ridom GmbH, Germany) and SeqMan Pro software (DNASTAR Inc. USA) were used to trim, quality-check and analyze the sequences. Isolates were assigned to their respective sequence types according to MLST website https://pubmlst.org/saureus.
Data analysis
Data were entered in Microsoft Excel 2010 and analyzed using STATA-13 software (STATA Corp LP, USA). Categorical variables such as history of admission, history of surgery, history of antibiotic use etc., were presented as proportions and compared using chi-squared test. Continuous variables such as age and duration of hospital stay were presented as medians [inter quartile range (IQR)] and compared using the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test. To identify factors associated with S. aureus carriage univariate regression followed by backward multivariate logistic regression analysis was done. A P-value of less than 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Ethical approval and consent to participate
The protocol for this study was reviewed and approved by the Joint Catholic University of Health and Allied Sciences/ Bugando Medical Centre ethics and scientific review committee (CREC/019/2014). All study participants signed an informed written consent.
Results
Patients’ and HCWs S. aureus nasal carriage and antimicrobial susceptibility pattern
Of the 930 patients screened on admission, 129 (13.9%) were colonized with S. aureus of which 5.4% (7/129) were MRSA. On discharge 363 patients were re-screened of whom 60 (16.5%) were colonized with S. aureus. Among these 29 out of 301 (9.6%) patients who had been tested negative on admission turned positive during their hospital stay. Three (10.3%) of the 29 acquired S. aureus were MRSA.
A total of 143 HCWs working in surgical wards of BMC and Sekou Toure hospital were screened for nasal S. aureus carriage of whom 11 (7.7%) were positive. Two (1.4%) of the 143 HCWs were colonized with MRSA.
All S. aureus isolates from patients were susceptible to fusidic acid, linezolid, mupirocin, teicoplanin and vancomycin. Overall, hospital-acquired S. aureus isolates were more resistant to commonly used antimicrobials than isolates from admission with significantly higher rates for erythromycin, rifampicin and tetracycline (Table 1). Inducible clindamycin resistance (ICR) occurred more in MRSA isolates than in methicillin-sensitive S. aureus (MSSA) isolates [17.3% (31/179) vs. 60% (6/10), P = 0.001]. ICR also occurred more often among acquired S. aureus isolates than in isolates from admission [34.5% (10/29) vs. 17.1% (22/129), P = 0.018].
Table 1.
Antimicrobial agent | Admission (N = 129) n (%) |
Acquired (N = 29) n (%) |
P value |
---|---|---|---|
Benzylpenicillin | 124 (96.1) | 29 (100) | 0.139 |
Clindamycin | 2 (1.6) | 1 (3.4) | 0.254 |
Daptomycin | 2 (1.6) | 0 | 0.750 |
Erythromycin | 32 (24.8) | 12 (41.4) | 0.035 |
Fusidic acid | 0 | 0 | – |
Gentamicin | 5 (3.9) | 1 (3.4) | 0.548 |
ICRa | 22 (17.1) | 10 (34.5) | 0.018 |
Levofloxacin | 1 (0.8) | 1 (3.4) | 0.126 |
Linezolid | 0 | 0 | – |
Mupirocin | 0 | 0 | – |
Rifampicin | 9 (6.9) | 7 (24.1) | 0.003 |
Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole | 68 (52.7) | 19 (65.5) | 0.105 |
Tetracycline | 26 (20.2) | 14 (48.3) | 0.001 |
Teicoplanin | 0 | 0 | – |
Vancomycin | 0 | 0 | – |
a ICR Inducible clindamycin resistance positive
S. aureus SSI and associated factors
Of the 536 followed-up patients, 78 (14.6%) developed SSI. In addition, out of 57 patients with SSI who were available for microbiological investigations, 12 (21.1%) cases were due to S. aureus of which two were infected with MRSA. The other 78.9% of SSI cases were due to varieties of gram-negative bacteria as detailed in previous publications [20, 21]. No association was found between S. aureus SSI and colonization status, history of previous hospitalization, use of antibiotics, history of previous surgeries and history of chronic diseases.
Sequence type (ST) distributions, spa types and PVL genes
MLST was employed to 60 S. aureus (58 from patients i.e. 12 SSI isolates and 46 carriage isolates, and two carriage isolates from HCWs). Of the 46 patients’ carriage isolates typed, 17 were from admission carriage and 29 were from discharge (13 acquired). Overall ST distribution was diverse in both groups of isolates. Eight STs were detected in the 17 isolates from admission of which ST8 (4/17) and ST5 (4/17) were dominant. Nine STs were detected among 13 acquired isolates typed of which ST152 (3/13) and ST5 (2/13) were predominant (Table 2).
Table 2.
ST | Admission (N = 17) | Acquired (N = 13) | SSI (N = 12) |
---|---|---|---|
8 | 4 | 1 | – |
5 | 4 | 2 | 2 |
152 | 3 | 3 | 3 |
3118 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
72 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
88 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
4224a | 1 | – | – |
4268a | 1 | – | – |
188 | – | 1 | – |
508 | – | 1 | – |
707 | – | 1 | – |
612 | – | – | 2 |
22 | – | – | 1 |
4266*a | – | – | 1 |
aNew ST
Regarding the 12 S. aureus SSI isolates, eight STs were detected. Identified STs were ST152 (3), ST5 (2), ST612 (2), ST22 (1), ST72 (1), ST88 (1), ST3118 (1) and a new ST4266 (1). The two MRSA isolates from wounds were all typed as ST612. Out of eight S. aureus carriage/infection pair, seven pairs were clonal by bearing the same spa and ST. Three of the seven SSI pairs were due to carriage strains on admission, whereas the four cases of SSI were due to acquired strains (Table 3).
Table 3.
ID | Hospital | Ward | Region | Type of surgery | Spaa | STa | Spab | STb | Spa-SSI | SSI-ST |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 | Bugando | E8 | Mara | ORIF | – | – | – | – | t690 | 88 |
26 | Bugando | C6 | Mara | Craniotomy | – | – | t4353 | 72 | t4353 | 72 |
67 | Bugando | C6 | Shinyanga | Amputation | – | – | – | – | t355 | 152 |
106 | Bugando | C6 | Mwanza | Cholecystectomy | – | – | – | – | t355 | 152 |
150 | Bugando | J5 | Mara | CRelease | – | – | t095 | 508 | t1257 | 612 |
152 | Bugando | J5 | Shinyanga | ORIF | t1257 | 612 | ||||
191 | Bugando | C9 | Mara | VPShunt | t148 | 3118 | t223 | 22 | t223 | 22 |
379 | Bugando | C6 | Mwanza | Laparatomy | t355 | 152 | t311 | 5 | t311 | 5 |
ST111 | SToure | MAT | Mwanza | Csection | t148 | 3118 | t148 | 3118 | t148 | 3118 |
ST148 | SToure | MAT | Mwanza | Csection | t002 | 5 | t223 | 4266* | t223 | 4266* |
ST159 | SToure | MAT | Mwanza | Csection | t002 | 5 | t002 | 5 | t002 | 5 |
ST302 | SToure | MAT | Mwanza | Csection | t355 | 152 | t355 | 152 | t355 | 152 |
a admission, b discharge SSI Surgical site infection CRelease contracture release; ORIF; Open Reduction Internal Fixation; Csection Caesarean Section; ST sequence type; *New ST
Overall, ST88 was detected in six of all 60 MLST typed isolates of which five were PVL positive including one isolate from BMC HCW with spa type t690.
Discussion
This study observed the admission and discharge S. aureus colonization rate to be 13.9 and 16.5%, respectively. The observed MRSA carriage of 5.4% on admission falls within a range of 0.2 to 7.2% observed among hospitalized patients in high-income countries [22–24]. The carriage rates are lower than 21% reported in Kwazul Natal, South Africa [25]. The difference observed in the two sub-Saharan African countries could be contributed by the nature of patients screened, in South Africa the majority of enrolled patients were HIV positive. HIV infection has been identified as a predictor of S. aureus colonization [26].
This study observed acquisition rate of 9.6 and 1% of S. aureus and MRSA, respectively. Although similar data are limited in African setting, the MRSA acquisition in this study is comparable to 1.7% previously reported in the United States [27]. Similar to the susceptibility patterns of S. aureus isolates reported in several African countries Tanzania inclusive [28], high rates of resistance to penicillin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole and tetracycline were observed among carriage isolates in this study. Overuse and inappropriate prescription of these antimicrobials for various clinical conditions in Tanzania might be the driver for the observed high rates [29].
As observed previously in S. aureus isolates from BMC in Mwanza city [30] and those from a National hospital in Dar es Salaam city [31] in Tanzania, rate of ICR was significantly higher in MRSA than MSSA isolates. Similar findings have been reported among admitted patients in Tanzania [32] and Uganda [33]. Furthermore, as previously observed [34], the ICR rate was significantly higher in hospital-acquired than on admission S. aureus isolates. The fact that all SSI-MRSA isolates were hospital-acquired, and that 35% of acquired isolates were positive for ICR highlights a possibility of failure to treat S. aureus hospital-acquired infections empirically by clindamycin.
This study identified none of the isolates to be resistant to fusidic acid. This finding is within a 0–2% range of fusidic acid resistance rate observed in most sub-Saharan African countries [28]. The rare use of this antimicrobial in our setting could explain the observed findings.
The proportion of S. aureus causing SSI in the current study (21.1%) is within a range of 12–28.6% reported in different places in Tanzania including BMC where part of the current study took place [10, 12, 35]. The observation of more than 90% of S. aureus SSI in this study were of endogenous source can be explained by likely to occur nasal to wound transmission of S. aureus in case of poor hygiene [36].
The S. aureus STs 88, 5, 8 and 127 that were reported to be predominant in African continent were also detected in this study [37], including ST612 which was previously reported as a rare ST in South Africa [38]. These findings indicate the availability of specific S. aureus clones circulating in Africa.
Of note, the MRSA variant with spa type t7231 and ST1797 which was reported as predominant clone circulating in the same BMC surgical wards in 2010 [17] was not detected in the current study, suggesting either the possibility of outbreak in 2010 or change of S. aureus clones causing wound infections. Most of the ST88 detected were PVL positive as it was observed in BMC and other parts of the African continent [17, 28].
Although the S. aureus carriage rate of 7.7% observed among HCWs is significantly lower compared to 18.3% reported in Kenya [39], unlike in this study Kenya reported zero MRSA carriage. The difference might be due to the different nature of the study populations with HCWs of various low-risk cadres including physiotherapy in Kenya compared to high-risk nurses in this study who work in surgical wards with frequent exposure to septic/MRSA positive patients.
This study identified one HCW from BMC surgical ward who was colonized with a PVL positive MRSA ST88, previously reported to cause wound infections in the surgical wards of the same hospital [17]. The fact that this nurse has been serving the same surgical ward including when the previous study was carried out points to a possibility of HCWs to be reservoirs of MRSA strains causing infections in patients.
Conclusion
Despite the large cohort, this study identified a low MRSA carriage among admitted patients and a low MRSA SSI. Most of the SSI were due to endogenous MSSA. Although the evidence is low, there is a possibility of HCWs being reservoirs of MRSA strains, a fact which highlights the role of screening them as part of the hospital IPC measures especially during outbreaks.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank the technical assistance provided by Vitus Silago and Hezron Basu of CUHAS microbiology laboratory. They are grateful to the key surveillance nurses from BMC hospital (Stella Rujwauka, Grace Ludovick, Maulidi Misanga, Tecla Tumsime and Paul Mvanda) as well as from Sekou Toure hospital (Pili Mbwana Kombo, Flora George Masanja and Anna Paul Lwanji), for their participation in this study.
Abbreviations
- BMC
Bugando Medical Centre
- CUHAS
Catholic University of Health and Allied Sciences
- HCW
HealthCare Workers
- MLST
Multilocus sequence
- MRSA
Methicillin-resistant S. aureus
- PVL
Panton Valentine leukocidin
- SSI
Surgical site infection
- ST
Sequence type
Authors’ contributions
NM, HC, UV and SEM conceived the idea and designed the study. NM collected data. NM performed preliminary laboratory analysis. NM and HC performed molecular characterization of the isolates. HC, SEM, UV and NM analysed data. NM wrote the manuscript which was reviewed and approved by UV, HC and SEM.
Funding
This study was supported by funds from the Institute for Hygiene and Microbiology of Wuerzburg, Germany, CUHAS and German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD).
Availability of data and materials
All data have been included in this manuscript.
Ethics approval and consent to participate
The Joint CUHAS/BMC research ethics and review committee approved the study protocol with clearance number CREC/019/2014. All patients signed an informed written consent.
Consent for publication
Not Applicable.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Footnotes
Publisher’s Note
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Contributor Information
Nyambura Moremi, Email: nyamburasogone@gmail.com.
Heike Claus, Email: hclaus@hygiene.uni-wuerzburg.de.
Ulrich Vogel, Email: vogel_u@ukw.de.
Stephen E. Mshana, Email: mshana72@yahoo.com
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