2022-03Zeitschriftenartikel
MRSA surveillance programmes worldwide: moving towards a harmonised international approach
Baede, Valérie O.
David, Michael Z.
Andrasevic, Arjana Tambic
Blanc, Dominique S.
Borg, Michael
Brennan, Grainne
Catry, Boudewijn
Chabaud, Aurélie
Empel, Joanna
Enger, Hege
Hallin, Marie
Ivanova, Marina
Kronenberg, Andreas
Kuntaman, Kuntaman
Larsen, Anders Rhod
Latour, Katrien
Lindsay, Jodi A.
Pichon, Bruno
Santosaningsih, Dewi
Schouls, Leo M.
Vandenesch, François
Werner, Guido
Żabicka, Dorota
Žemličková, Helena
Seifert, Harald
Vos, Margreet C.
MRSA Surveillance Worldwide Study Group
ESCMID Study Group for Nosocomial Infections (ESGNI)
ESCMID Study Group for Staphylococci and Staphylococcal Diseases
Multinational surveillance programmes for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) are dependent on national structures for data collection. This study aimed to capture the diversity of national MRSA surveillance programmes and to propose a framework for harmonisation of MRSA surveillance. The International Society of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy (ISAC) MRSA Working Group conducted a structured survey on MRSA surveillance programmes and organised a webinar to discuss the programmes’ strengths and challenges as well as guidelines for harmonisation. Completed surveys represented 24 MRSA surveillance programmes in 16 countries. Several countries reported separate epidemiological and microbiological surveillance. Informing clinicians and national policy-makers were the most common purposes of surveillance. Surveillance of bloodstream infections (BSIs) was present in all programmes. Other invasive infections were often included. Three countries reported active surveillance of MRSA carriage. Methodology and reporting of antimicrobial susceptibility, virulence factors, molecular genotyping and epidemiological metadata varied greatly. Current MRSA surveillance programmes rely upon heterogeneous data collection systems, which hampers international epidemiological monitoring and research. To harmonise MRSA surveillance, we suggest improving the integration of microbiological and epidemiological data, implementation of central biobanks for MRSA isolate collection, and inclusion of a representative sample of skin and soft-tissue infection cases in addition to all BSI cases.
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