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. 2021 Nov 15;139(6):607–614. doi: 10.1590/1516-3180.2020.0564.R2.22042021

Table 2. Characterization of studies included in this review (n = 30). Teresina (PI), Brazil, 2020.

Article Authors/Year Location Objective Site
A1 Prates et al.11 2010 Brazil To determine the prevalence of nasal transportation of S. aureus in university students. Nostrils
A2 Syafinaz et al.12 2012 Malaysia To determine the prevalence of S. aureus nasal carriers among medical students. Nostrils
A3 Bettin et al.13 2012 Colombia To investigate the nasal transportation of Panton-Valentin leukocidin-positive S. aureus strains, categories of transportation and risk factors associated with colonization, in medical students. Nostrils
A4 Chen et al.14 2012 China To investigate whether clinical exposure in the hospital affects MRSA nasal transportation among medical students. Nostrils
A5 Sabri et al.16 2013 Palestine To investigate the prevalence of nasal transportation of S. aureus and MRSA. Nostrils
A6 López-Aguilera et al.15 2013 Spain To determine the prevalence of nasal carriers of sensitive and methicillin-resistant S. aureus and evaluate knowledge of and adherence to hand hygiene among students. Nostrils
A7 Mat Azis et al.17 2014 Malaysia To evaluate the transportation of S. aureus and its persistence in students of health sciences. Nostrils
A8 Malik et al.18 2014 Brunei To determine the prevalence of the status of nasal carrier of S. aureus and MRSA among healthy young people. Nostrils
A9 Krishnamurthy et al.19 2014 India To examine the influence of exposure to the hospital environment on MRSA transportation, MRSA antimicrobial resistance patterns and presence of genes that encode five determinants of extracellular pathogenicity. Nostrils, throat and hand palms
A10 Demirel et al.20 2014 Turkey To investigate the prevalence of methicillin-sensitive (CA-MSSA) and resistant (CA-MRSA) S. aureus, including inducible sleepers (ID-MRSA), in S. aureus and MRSA strain genotypes from nasal cultures. Nostrils
A11 Renushri et al.21 2014 India To assess the influence of exposure to the hospital environment on MRSA transportation. Nostrils and throat
A12 Ribeiro et al.22 2014 Brazil To identify S. aureus and MRSA in university students. Nostrils and palm hands
A13 Holý et al.24 2015 Czech Republic To investigate the prevalence of nasal transportation of S. aureus and MRSA in healthy people aged 18–26 years. To find out whether the prevalence of nasal transportation strains of S. aureus and MRSA varies over the years of studies. To compare general medical students from year 1 and year 5 for nasal transportation of S. aureus and MRSA strains. Nostrils
A14 Zakai et al.23 2015 Saudi Arabia To identify MRSA nasal carrier status among medical students during their clinical rotations. Nostrils
A15 Collazos Marín et al.25 2015 Colombia To establish the genetic diversity of S. aureus isolates and detect the presence of mecA gene in isolated strains in asymptomatic medical students who were in their clinical rotation phase in a hospital. Nostrils
A16 Petti et al.26 2015 Italy To evaluate the MRSA carrier rate in a sample of dental students. Nostrils, throat and palm hands
A17 Hogan et al.3 2016 Madagascar To examine the prevalence and clonal epidemiology of nasal S. aureus and MRSA among healthcare professionals and non-medical university students. Nostrils
A18 Javaeed et al.27 2016 Pakistan To assess the prevalence of MRSA transportation in healthy medical students. Nostrils
A19 Subri et al.28 2016 Malaysia To determine the prevalence of nasal colonization of S. aureus and its susceptibility to antibiotics among pre-clinical and clinical physicians and nursing students. Nostrils
A20 Ansari et al.29 2016 Nepal To evaluate the rate of nasal colonization of S. aureus, its methicillin-resistant strains and risk factors in medical students before clinical exposure. Nostrils
A21 Okamo et al.30 2016 Tanzania To determine the prevalence of S. aureus and MRSA nasal transportation among medical students, and the antimicrobial susceptibility of isolated profiles of S. aureus, and to verify the association of S. aureus nasal transportation with demographic and clinical characteristics. Nostrils
A22 Baek et al.31 2016 South Korea To determine the prevalence rate of nasal colonization by MRSA among dental students and identify the characteristics of the strains isolated. Nostrils
A23 Radhakrishna et al.32 2016 India To establish the prevalence and pattern of S. aureus antibiograms, with special emphasis on MRSA among students of the second year. Nostrils
A24 Abroo et al.7 2017 Iran To investigate the prevalence, antimicrobial susceptibility and molecular factors characteristic of CA (community acquired) MRSA among two groups of college students (medical and non-medical). Nostrils
A25 Budri et al.33 2018 Ireland To investigate co-located nasal Staphylococcus aureus and coagulase-negative staphylococci (CoNS), recovered from healthy medical students in a preclinical year and the transportation of genes and common elements to both species that may contribute to the evolution of S. aureus and MRSA. Nostrils
A26 Al-Tamimi et al.34 2018 Jordan To investigate the prevalence, standard antimicrobial susceptibility, antibiotic resistance genes and risk factors of medical students with MRSA. Nostrils
A27 Suhaili et al.35 2018 Malaysia To evaluate the antimicrobial susceptibility profile of S. aureus strains isolated from university students and to determine the prevalence of resistance to constitutive and inducible clindamycin, in which the latter would be capable of causing therapeutic failure due to false in vitro susceptibility to clindamycin. Nostrils
A28 Onanuga et al.36 2019 Nigeria To determine the antibiogram and the virulent characteristics of nasal S. aureus, accessing its profile of resistance to antibiotics and potential pathogens in healthy students at the University of the Niger Delta, Bayelsa State, Nigeria. Nostrils
A29 Szymanek-Majchrzak et al.37 2019 Poland To evaluate and compare the level of colonization of S. aureus (MRSA or MSSA) among medical students and evaluate the sensitivity of the strains. Nostrils
A30 Efa et al.5 2019 Ethiopia To determine the nasal transportation of MRSA and its antimicrobial susceptibility patterns among medical students at the Jimma University Medical Center (JUMC), southwestern Ethiopia. Nostrils