Vincze Szilvia, Stamm Ivonne, Kopp Peter A, Hermes Julia, Adlhoch Cornelia, Semmler Torsten, Wieler Lothar H, Lübke-Becker Antina, Walther Birgit
Institute of Microbiology and Epizootics, Veterinary Faculty, Free University Berlin, Germany.
Vet Med Labor GmbH, Division of IDEXX Laboratories, Ludwigsburg, Germany.
PLoS One. 2014 Jan 20;9(1):e85656. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0085656. eCollection 2014.
Staphylococcus (S.) aureus is an important cause of wound infections in companion animals, and infections with methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) are of particular concern due to limited treatment options and their zoonotic potential. However, comparable epidemiological data on MRSA infections in dogs, cats and horses is scarce, also limiting the knowledge about possible links to MRSA isolates from human populations. To gain more knowledge about the occurrence and genotypic variation of MRSA among wound swabs of companion animal origin in Germany we performed a survey (2010-2012) including 5,229 samples from 1,170 veterinary practices. S. aureus was identified in 201 (5.8%) canine, 140 (12.2%) feline and 138 (22.8%) equine swabs from a total of 3,479 canine, 1,146 feline and 604 equine wounds, respectively. High MRSA rates were identified with 62.7%, 46.4% and 41.3% in S. aureus of canine, feline and equine origin, respectively. Further genotyping including spa typing and multilocus sequence typing (MLST) revealed a comparable distribution of spa types among canine and feline MRSA with CC22 (47.6%; 49.2%) and CC5 (30.2%; 29.2%) as predominant lineages followed by CC398 (13.5%; 7.7%) and CC8 (4.0%; 9.2%). In contrast, the majority of equine MRSA belonged to CC398 (87.7%). Our data highlight the importance of S. aureus and MRSA as a cause of wound infections, particularly in cats and horses in Germany. While "human-associated" MRSA lineages were most common in dogs and cats, a remarkable number of CC398-MRSA was detected in horses, indicating a replacement of CC8-MRSA as the predominant lineage within horses in Germany. These data enforce further longitudinal epidemiological approaches to examine the diversity and temporal relatedness of MRSA populations in humans and animals to assess probable sources of MRSA infections. This would enable a sound risk assessment and establishment of intervention strategies to limit the additional spread of MRSA.
金黄色葡萄球菌是伴侣动物伤口感染的重要病因,耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌(MRSA)感染因其治疗选择有限及其人畜共患病潜力而备受关注。然而,关于犬、猫和马的MRSA感染的可比流行病学数据稀缺,这也限制了我们对其与人类分离出的MRSA之间可能联系的了解。为了更多地了解德国伴侣动物伤口拭子中MRSA的发生情况和基因型变异,我们进行了一项调查(2010 - 2012年),涵盖了来自1170家兽医诊所的5229份样本。在总共3479份犬类、1146份猫类和604份马类伤口拭子中,分别在201份(5.8%)犬类、140份(12.2%)猫类和138份(22.8%)马类拭子中鉴定出金黄色葡萄球菌。犬、猫和马来源的金黄色葡萄球菌中MRSA检出率分别为62.7%、46.4%和41.3%。进一步的基因分型,包括spa分型和多位点序列分型(MLST)显示,犬类和猫类MRSA的spa型分布相当,CC22(47.6%;49.2%)和CC5(30.2%;29.2%)为主要菌系,其次是CC398(13.5%;7.7%)和CC8(4.0%;9.2%)。相比之下,大多数马类MRSA属于CC398(87.7%)。我们的数据突出了金黄色葡萄球菌和MRSA作为伤口感染病因的重要性,尤其是在德国的猫和马中。虽然“与人类相关”的MRSA菌系在犬和猫中最为常见,但在马中检测到了相当数量的CC398 - MRSA,这表明在德国马中CC8 - MRSA作为主要菌系的地位被取代。这些数据促使进一步采用纵向流行病学方法来研究人类和动物中MRSA种群的多样性和时间相关性,以评估MRSA感染的可能来源。这将有助于进行合理的风险评估并制定干预策略,以限制MRSA的进一步传播。