Antibiotics (Nov 2021)

Utility of Methicillin-Resistant <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i> Nares Screening in Hospitalized Children with Acute Infectious Disease Syndromes

  • Ashley Sands,
  • Nicole Mulvey,
  • Denise Iacono,
  • Jane Cerise,
  • Stefan H. F. Hagmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10121434
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 12
p. 1434

Abstract

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Studies in adults support the use of a negative methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) nares screening (MNS) to help limit empiric anti-MRSA antibiotic therapy. We aimed to evaluate the use of MNS for anti-MRSA antibiotic de-escalation in hospitalized children (n = 38, 40%), toxin-mediated syndromes (n = 17, 17.9%), and osteoarticular infections (n = 14, 14.7%). Nasal MRSA colonization and growth of MRSA in clinical cultures was found in seven patients (7.4%) each. The specificity and the negative predictive value (NPV) of the MNS to predict a clinical MRSA infection were both 95.5%. About half (n = 55, 57.9%) had anti-MRSA antibiotics discontinued in-house. A quarter (n = 14, 25.5%) were de-escalated based on the negative MNS test alone, and another third (n = 21, 38.2%) after negative MNS test and negative culture results became available. A high NPV suggests that MNS may be useful for limiting unnecessary anti-MRSA therapy and thereby a useful antimicrobial stewardship tool for hospitalized children. Prospective studies are needed to further characterize the utility of MNS for specific infectious diagnoses.

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