Clinical impact and public health challenges of a PVL-MRSA bacteraemia outbreak amongst people who inject drugs in South Yorkshire, UK.

Access Microbiol

Staphylococcal and Streptococcus Reference Laboratory, United Kingdom Health Security Agency, 61 Colindale Avenue, London, NW9 5EQ, UK.

Published: February 2024

Background: Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL) (SA) is an emergent public health concern. PVL toxin has been mostly associated with methicillin-sensitive (MSSA)-related skin and soft tissue infections occurring in high-risk groups such as people who inject drugs (PWID). The emergence of PVL methicillin-resistant (MRSA) infection is causing severe and life-threatening disease in PWID.

Clinical Cases: We present an outbreak of eight PVL-MRSA bacteraemia cases at a UK teaching hospital between 2018 and 2022. An additional four patients developed bacteraemia with PVL-negative MRSA of the same multilocus sequence type (MLST). All patients were PWID and aged 33-51 years old. Four patients developed MRSA bacterial endocarditis. Three patients died. These cases represent the initial cases detected at Doncaster and Bassetlaw Teaching Hospitals of what is an ongoing and developing outbreak.

Management: An outbreak investigation has been undertaken in association with the UK Health Security Agency. Epidemiological factors have been explored, including via direct contact at a local sheltered accommodation and the possibility of a contaminated drug supply. Whole-genome sequencing confirmed that all isolates were closely related and of the same MLST (sequence type 5). A community substance misuse group disseminated health education on the prevention of PVL-MRSA. Preventing infection in PWID presents a major challenge due to the impact of addiction on engagement with services and the significant barriers faced by our patients in observing infection prevention measures.

Conclusion: PVL-MRSA is of major public health concern and outbreak investigation and mapping out local epidemiological patterns plays a vital role in preventing further spread throughout the community. Additionally, this work enables targeted and early treatment in patients in high-risk categories for disease. These cases of PVL-MRSA infection in PWID highlights the transmissibility, pathogenic potential and severe clinical disease spectrum within this population. Further work is required to tackle transmission and infection from this pathogenic strain.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10928388PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/acmi.0.000642.v3DOI Listing

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