Advanced Science (Feb 2022)

A Survey of Chinese Pig Farms and Human Healthcare Isolates Reveals Separate Human and Animal Methicillin‐Resistant Staphylococcus aureus Populations

  • Geng Zou,
  • Marta Matuszewska,
  • Ming Jia,
  • Jianwei Zhou,
  • Xiaoliang Ba,
  • Juan Duan,
  • Caishi Zhang,
  • Jian Zhao,
  • Meng Tao,
  • Jingyan Fan,
  • Xiangming Zhang,
  • Wenping Jin,
  • Tianpen Cui,
  • Xianyu Zeng,
  • Min Jia,
  • Xiaojuan Qian,
  • Chao Huang,
  • Wenxiao Zhuo,
  • Zhiming Yao,
  • Lijun Zhang,
  • Shaowen Li,
  • Lu Li,
  • Qi Huang,
  • Bin Wu,
  • Huanchun Chen,
  • Alexander W. Tucker,
  • Andrew J. Grant,
  • Mark A. Holmes,
  • Rui Zhou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202103388
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract There has been increasing concern that the overuse of antibiotics in livestock farming is contributing to the burden of antimicrobial resistance in people. Farmed animals in Europe and North America, particularly pigs, provide a reservoir for livestock‐associated methicillin‐resistant Staphylococcus aureus (LA‐MRSA ST398 lineage) found in people. This study is designed to investigate the contribution of MRSA from Chinese pig farms to human infection. A collection of 483 MRSA are isolated from 55 farms and 4 hospitals in central China, a high pig farming density area. CC9 MRSA accounts for 97.2% of all farm isolates, but is not present in hospital isolates. ST398 isolates are found on farms and hospitals, but none of them formed part of the “LA‐MRSA ST398 lineage” present in Europe and North America. The hospital ST398 MRSA isolate form a clade that is clearly separate from the farm ST398 isolates. Despite the presence of high levels of MRSA found on Chinese pig farms, the authors find no evidence of them spilling over to the human population. Nevertheless, the ST398 MRSA obtained from hospitals appear to be part of a widely distributed lineage in China. The new animal‐adapted ST398 lineage that has emerged in China is of concern.

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