MRSA in swine, farmers and abattoir workers in Southern Italy.

Clicks: 254
ID: 41877
2019
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is an important medical issue, since it causes serious and sometimes fatal infections in humans. Intensively reared swine may serve as reservoirs for MRSA that can infect swine workers, and also consumers (via contaminated meat). In this study, MRSA strains were isolated from 55 of the 85 (64.7%) intensive pig farms surveyed, and prevalence was greater on pig fattening farms than on breeding farms. In addition, we included in the study 63 foreign pigs imported for slaughter. Overall, the prevalence of MRSA in the 418 sampled swine was 59.1%; 12 genotypes were identified among the isolates; ST398 (96.4%) was most prevalent, followed by ST97 (2%), ST9 (0.8%) and ST1 (0.8%). MRSA isolates were also detected in 26 (17.3%) of the 150 operators included in the study; the genotypes detected were ST398 (85%), ST9 (7.6%), ST5 (3.8%) and ST1 (3.8%). All the strains were pvl negative and pia positive. Both swine and human strains displayed a multi-resistance pattern, and almost all were resistant to tetracycline. The results obtained in this study confirm the high prevalence of MRSA in swine reared and slaughtered in Italy, and underline the public health risk linked to the spread of antimicrobial-resistant Staphylococcus aureus among intensively reared pigs.
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parisi2019mrsafood Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Parisi, Antonio;Caruso, Marta;Normanno, Giovanni;Latorre, Laura;Miccolupo, Angela;Fraccalvieri, Rosa;Intini, Francesco;Manginelli, Teresa;Santagada, Gianfranco;
Journal food microbiology
Year 2019
DOI S0740-0020(18)30601-4
URL
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