Scientific Reports (Jul 2022)

Clinical impact of and microbiological risk factors for qacA/B positivity in ICU-acquired ST5-methicillin-resistant SCCmec type II Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia

  • Haein Kim,
  • Sunghee Park,
  • Hyeonji Seo,
  • Hyemin Chung,
  • Eun Sil Kim,
  • Heungsup Sung,
  • Mi-Na Kim,
  • Seongman Bae,
  • Jiwon Jung,
  • Min Jae Kim,
  • Sung-Han Kim,
  • Sang-Oh Lee,
  • Sang-Ho Choi,
  • Yang Soo Kim,
  • Yong Pil Chong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-15546-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Concern about resistance to chlorhexidine has increased due to the wide use of the latter. The impact of the qacA/B and smr chlorhexidine tolerance genes on the outcome of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections is unclear. We evaluated the prevalence and clinical impact of, and microbiological risk factors for, qacA/B tolerance in MRSA bacteremia. MRSA bacteremia that occurred more than two days after intensive care unit admission between January 2009 and December 2018 was identified from a prospective cohort of S. aureus bacteremia in a tertiary-care hospital from South Korea. A total of 183 MRSA blood isolates was identified, and the major genotype found was ST5-MRSA-II (87.4%). The prevalences of qacA/B and smr were 67.2% and 3.8%, respectively. qacA/B-positive isolates were predominantly ST5-MRSA-II (96.7% [119/123]), the dominant hospital clone. In a homogenous ST5-MRSA-II background, qacA/B positivity was independently associated with septic shock (aOR, 4.85), gentamicin resistance (aOR, 74.43), and non-t002 spa type (aOR, 74.12). qacA/B positivity was found to have decreased significantly in ST5-MRSA-II in association with a decline in qacA/B-positive t2460, despite the increasing use of chlorhexidine since 2010 (P < 0.001 for trend). Continuous surveillance of the qac genes, and molecular characterization of their plasmids, are needed to understand their role in MRSA epidemiology.