Department of Pharmacy, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore, Singapore.
J Travel Med. 2014 Jul-Aug;21(4):272-81. doi: 10.1111/jtm.12133. Epub 2014 Jun 3.
Increasing international travel has facilitated the transmission of various multidrug-resistant bacteria-including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)-across continents. Individuals may acquire MRSA from the community, healthcare facilities, or even from animal exposure. Skin contact with colonized individuals, fomites, or animals during an overseas trip may result in either asymptomatic colonization or subsequent clinically significant MRSA disease. MRSA strains that harbor the Panton-Valentine leucocidin toxin are particularly associated with community transmission and may potentially have enhanced virulence resulting in serious skin and soft tissue infections or even necrotizing pneumonia. More importantly, secondary transmission events upon return from traveling have been documented, leading to potentially detrimental outbreaks within the community or the healthcare setting. We sought to review the existing literature relating to the role of various aspects of travel in the spread of MRSA. Risk factors for acquiring MRSA during travel together with the need for targeted screening of high-risk individuals will also be explored.
Data for this article were identified via PubMed searches using a combination of search terms: "methicillin resistance," "MRSA," "livestock-associated MRSA," "community-associated MRSA," "travel," and "outbreak." The relevant articles were extensively perused to determine secondary sources of data.
Our review of the current literature suggests that international travel plays a significant role in the transmission of MRSA, potentially contributing to the replacement of existing endemic MRSA with fitter and more transmissible strains. Therefore, selective and targeted screening of travelers with risk factors for MRSA colonization may be beneficial. Healthcare professionals and patients should be considered for screening if they were to return from endemic areas, with the former group decolonized before returning to patient care work, in order to reduce the transmission of MRSA to vulnerable patient populations.
国际旅行的增加促进了各种耐多药细菌的传播,包括耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌(MRSA)-跨越各大洲。个人可能从社区、医疗机构甚至动物接触中获得 MRSA。在海外旅行期间与定植个体、污染物或动物进行皮肤接触可能导致无症状定植或随后出现临床上有意义的 MRSA 疾病。携带 Panton-Valentine 白细胞毒素的 MRSA 菌株与社区传播特别相关,并且可能具有增强的毒力,导致严重的皮肤和软组织感染甚至坏死性肺炎。更重要的是,有记录表明在旅行返回后发生了二次传播事件,导致社区或医疗机构内潜在的有害爆发。我们试图回顾与旅行在 MRSA 传播中的各种作用相关的现有文献。还将探讨旅行期间获得 MRSA 的危险因素以及对高危个体进行有针对性筛查的必要性。
本文的数据通过使用搜索词的组合在 PubMed 上进行搜索确定:“耐甲氧西林”、“MRSA”、“与牲畜相关的 MRSA”、“社区相关的 MRSA”、“旅行”和“爆发”。广泛阅读相关文章以确定二级数据来源。
我们对当前文献的回顾表明,国际旅行在 MRSA 的传播中起着重要作用,可能导致现有的地方性 MRSA 被更适应和更具传染性的菌株所取代。因此,对有 MRSA 定植危险因素的旅行者进行选择性和有针对性的筛查可能是有益的。如果医护人员和患者从流行地区返回,应考虑对他们进行筛查,在返回病人护理工作之前,应对前者进行去定植,以减少 MRSA 向脆弱的病人群体传播。