Pathogens (Dec 2022)

Characteristics of <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i> Isolated from Patients in Busia County Referral Hospital, Kenya

  • Benear Apollo Obanda,
  • Elizabeth A. J. Cook,
  • Eric M. Fèvre,
  • Lilly Bebora,
  • William Ogara,
  • Shu-Hua Wang,
  • Wondwossen Gebreyes,
  • Ronald Ngetich,
  • Dolphine Wandede,
  • Johnstone Muyodi,
  • Beth Blane,
  • Francesc Coll,
  • Ewan M. Harrison,
  • Sharon J. Peacock,
  • George C. Gitao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens11121504
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
p. 1504

Abstract

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Staphylococcus aureus is an important pathogen associated with hospital, community, and livestock-acquired infections, with the ability to develop resistance to antibiotics. Nasal carriage by hospital inpatients is a risk for opportunistic infections. Antibiotic susceptibility patterns, virulence genes and genetic population structure of S. aureus nasal isolates, from inpatients at Busia County Referral Hospital (BCRH) were analyzed. A total of 263 inpatients were randomly sampled, from May to July 2015. The majority of inpatients (85.9%) were treated empirically with antimicrobials, including ceftriaxone (65.8%) and metronidazole (49.8%). Thirty S. aureus isolates were cultured from 29 inpatients with a prevalence of 11% (10.3% methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (MSSA), 0.8% methicillin resistant S. aureus (MRSA)). Phenotypic and genotypic resistance was highest to penicillin-G (96.8%), trimethoprim (73.3%), and tetracycline (13.3%) with 20% of isolates classified as multidrug resistant. Virulence genes, Panton-Valentine leukocidin (pvl), toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 (tsst-1), and sasX gene were detected in 16.7%, 23.3% and 3.3% of isolates. Phylogenetic analysis showed 4 predominant clonal complexes CC152, CC8, CC80, and CC508. This study has identified that inpatients of BCRH were carriers of S. aureus harbouring virulence genes and resistance to a range of antibiotics. This may indicate a public health risk to other patients and the community.

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