We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Heterogeneously vancomycin-intermediate Staphylococcus aureus (hVISA) emerged before the clinical introduction of vancomycin in Japan: a retrospective study.
- Authors
Yamakawa, Jun; Aminaka, Mayumi; Okuzumi, Katsuko; Kobayashi, Hiroyoshi; Katayama, Yuki; Kondo, Shigemi; Nakamura, Ayako; Oguri, Toyoko; Hori, Satoshi; Cui, Longzhu; Ito, Teruyo; Jin, Jingxun; Kurosawa, Hisashi; Kaneko, Kazuo; Hiramatsu, Keiichi
- Abstract
Vancomycin-intermediate Staphylococcus aureus (VISA) and its precursor, heterogeneous VISA (hVISA), are increasingly the cause of vancomycin treatment failure. Prolonged glycopeptide treatment causes the emergence of these pathogens. However, we recently reported that hVISA can be generated by methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) exposure to imipenem (Katayama et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 53:3190-6). We report here a retrospective prevalence study of VISA and hVISA on 750 MRSA clinical strains isolated from 31 Japanese national university hospitals in 1990, the year before the introduction of injectable vancomycin into clinical use in Japan in 1991. No VISA strain was identified, but population analysis identified 38 hVISA strains (5.1%) from 19 hospitals. We also determined the nucleotide sequences of vraSR, walRK, clpP, and rpoB genes whose mutations are known to be associated with vancomycin resistance. When compared with vancomycin-susceptible MRSA strain N315, six of the 38 hVISA strains possessed nonsynonymous mutations in vraSR, seven in walRK, and two in rpoB genes, Thirteen of 38 (34.2%) hVISA strains possessed at least one of these mutations. Results were consistent with our hypothesis that hVISA was present in Japanese hospitals before the clinical introduction of vancomycin.
- Subjects
MEDICAL research; VANCOMYCIN; STAPHYLOCOCCUS aureus; VANCOMYCIN resistance; GLYCOPEPTIDES; THERAPEUTICS
- Publication
Journal of Infection & Chemotherapy (Springer Science & Business Media B.V.), 2012, Vol 18, Issue 3, p406
- ISSN
1341-321X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10156-011-0330-2