Is Panton–Valentine leucocidin associated with the pathogenesis of Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia in the UK?

MJ Ellington, R Hope, M Ganner… - Journal of …, 2007 - academic.oup.com
MJ Ellington, R Hope, M Ganner, M Ganner, C East, G Brick, AM Kearns
Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy, 2007academic.oup.com
Background The morbidity and mortality associated with Panton–Valentine leucocidin (PVL)-
positive Staphylococcus aureus suggest that this toxin is a key marker of disease severity.
Nevertheless, theimportance of PVL in the pathogenesis of primary bacteraemia caused by
S. aureus is uncertain. We have determined the prevalence of PVL-encoding genes among
isolates of S. aureus from bacteraemic patients. Methods Consecutive bacteraemia isolates
of S. aureus (n= 244) from patients hospitalized in 25 centres in the UK and Ireland during …
Background
The morbidity and mortality associated with Panton–Valentine leucocidin (PVL)-positive Staphylococcus aureus suggest that this toxin is a key marker of disease severity. Nevertheless, theimportance of PVL in the pathogenesis of primary bacteraemia caused by S. aureus is uncertain. We have determined the prevalence of PVL-encoding genes among isolates of S. aureus from bacteraemic patients.
Methods
Consecutive bacteraemia isolates of S. aureus (n = 244) from patients hospitalized in 25 centres in the UK and Ireland during 2005 were screened for PVL and mecA genes. PVL-positive isolates were characterized by toxin gene profiling, PFGE, spa-typing and MIC determinations for a range of antimicrobials.
Results
Four out of 244 isolates (1.6%) were PVL-positive and susceptible to oxacillin [methicillin-susceptibleS. aureus (MSSA)]. Eighty-eight out of 244 (36%) were oxacillin-resistant (methicillin-resistant S. aureus), but none was PVL-positive. The four patients (two males: 30 and 33 years; two females: 62 and 80 years) had infection foci of: skin and soft tissue, unknown, indwelling line, and surgical site, and were located at one centre in Wales, one in England and two in Ireland. One of four PVL-positive isolates was resistant to penicillin and fusidic acid, the remainder were susceptible to all antibiotics tested. Genotypic analyses showed that the four isolates represented three distinct strains; the two isolates from Ireland were related.
Conclusions
We found that 1.6% of S. aureus (all MSSA) from bacteraemic patients were PVL-positive. This low incidence suggests that PVL-positive S. aureus are of no particular significance as causative agents of S. aureus bacteraemia.
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