People who live near livestock or in livestock farming
communities may be at greater risk of acquiring, Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA), according to a new study led by an
international team of researchers from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg
School of Public Health, the Dutch Institute for Public Health and the
Environment (RIVM) and VU University Medical Center in Amsterdam. A
comparison of livestock density, place of residence and existing
information on risk factors found that regional density of livestock is
an important risk factor for nasal carriage of livestock-associated (LA)
MRSA for persons with and without direct contact with livestock.
The results are featured in the November issue of Emerging Infectious Diseases.
Staphylococcus aureus is a pathogen that can cause a range of
illnesses in humans, from minor to life-threatening skin, bloodstream,
respiratory, urinary and surgical site infections. According to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, MRSA is a type of staph
bacteria that is resistant to penicillin and certain first-line
antibiotics called beta-lactams. MRSA infections are most commonly
infections of the skin. Though nasal carriage, the indicator under study
in this research, does not indicate that someone is infected with MRSA,
it is associated with increased risks of eventual infection. Moreover,
in this study it is a measure of exposure to MRSA. "In the past, MRSA
has been largely associated with hospitals and other health care
facilities, but in the last decade the majority of infections have been
acquired in the community outside of a health care setting," said Ellen
Silbergeld, PhD, co-author of the study and a professor with the
Bloomberg School of Public Health's Department of Environmental Health
Sciences.
This study is the first to suggest the importance of indirect routes
of transmission of livestock-associated MRSA. Jan Kluytmans, MD, PhD,
co-author of the study and professor of Medical Microbiology and
Infection Control, VU University Medical Center Amsterdam and Amphia
Hospital Breda, the Netherlands, said, "In the Netherlands LA-MRSA was
first found in 2003 and was initially almost exclusively found in
persons with direct contact to livestock. In recent years LA-MRSA is
found with increasing frequency in community-dwelling individuals with
no known contact with livestock. It is important to determine the routes
of transmission outside of the farms since this may have important
consequences for public health."
"Using logistic regression, we found that as the density of veal
calves, pigs, or cattle doubles in a specific area, the odds of carrying
LA-MRSA increases between 24 percent and 77 percent, depending on the
animal. These results challenge us to understand how these exposures
could be occurring," said Beth Feingold, PhD, MPH, MESc, lead author of
the study, Bloomberg School of Public Health graduate and the Glenadore
and Howard L. Pim Postdoctoral Fellow in Global Change at the Johns
Hopkins Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and Sciences. "This work has
potential policy implications for MRSA surveillance in countries with a
substantial percentage of total MRSA cases being livestock-associated
MRSA. Controlling the spread of livestock-associated MRSA requires
attention to community members in animal-dense regions who are otherwise
unaffiliated with livestock farming."
Using existing data on non-typable or livestock-associated MRSA
carriage from the Netherlands, as well as country-wide statistics on
livestock and population densities, the team of U.S. and Dutch
researchers examined how regional-level factors played into an
individual's risk, after accounting for their personal risk factors such
as their direct contact with animals, whether they lived in a rural or
urban locale, and in what situation they likely acquired MRSA. Using
geographic information systems, the researchers geocoded
livestock-associated MRSA cases and other types of MRSA controls by
postal codes. They used the geographic information to examine spatial
patterns of livestock-associated MRSA compared to other types of MRSA.
Researchers found that the odds of LA-MRSA as compared to other types of
MRSA are highest in the Southeast region of the country, a major
livestock production area of the Netherlands.
The authors conclude that the study may also have serious
implications for individuals living in the U.S. due to the sheer volume
of pig farms in this country. "Swine production is a significant
industry in the Netherlands, but its density and scale are much less
than in the United States. Future work should investigate the
relationship between intensive livestock operations in the US and
exposures to drug-resistant microbes including MRSA," said Ellen
Silbergeld.
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