Staphylococcus aureus are common inhabitants of the upper respiratory tract in children and are responsible for common infections. Carriage of S aureus and S pneumoniae can result in bacterial spread and endogenous infections. [1][2][3] Streptococcus pneumoniae is carried in the nasopharynx by most children at least once during early childhood 1 but not frequently by adults. 4 Staphylococcus aureus is carried by 10% to 35% of children [5][6][7] and by approximately 35% of the general adult population. 3 Staphylococcus aureus is carried most consistently in the nares.Various studies have explored bacterial interference-the suppression of one species by another. [8][9][10][11] However, studies examining possible interference between S aureus and S pneumoniae are noticeably absent. An association between these 2 pathogens may suggest epidemiologic changes that could follow widespread vaccination with pneumococcal conjugate vaccines.We investigated the possible association between the 2 pathogens by studying their prevalence and risk factors for carriage in young children in a region where pneumococcal conjugate vaccination is not practiced.
METHODSThe study was approved by the Sheba Medical Center Ethics Committee, Ramat-Gan, Israel. Informed consent was obtained from all parents.
Study PopulationDuring February 2002, children aged 40 months or younger seen for any rea-son in 53 participating primary care pediatric clinics of a major health maintenance organization (Maccabi Healthcare Services, Tel-Aviv) were enrolled. The clinics were located in 4 large cities in the central district of Israel, inhabited by a middle-class Jew-
The rate of Streptococcus pneumoniae carriage among adults was compared with that among children (age, < or =6 years) in the same population. Nasopharyngeal culture results for 1300 adults and 404 children were analyzed. S. pneumoniae was carried by only 4% of the adults, compared with 53% of children in the same community. Young age, day care center attendance, having young siblings, and no antibiotic use during the month before screening were associated with the high carriage rate among children, whereas the only risk factor associated with carriage among adults was the presence of a respiratory infection on the screening day. S. pneumoniae serotype distribution and antibiotic resistance patterns differed between adults and children. Isolates of the same serotype--even of the same clone--differed in their antibiotic susceptibility patterns between children and adults. In a subanalysis of 151 pairs of children and their parents and of 32 pairs of siblings, intrafamilial transmission of S. pneumoniae could not be demonstrated.
Epidemiological data on community acquired methicillin-resistant-Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) carriage and infection in the Middle-East region is scarce with only few reports in the Israeli and Palestinian populations. As part of a Palestinian-Israeli collaborative research, we have conducted a cross-sectional survey of nasal S. aureus carriage in healthy children and their parents throughout the Gaza strip. Isolates were characterized for antibiotic susceptibility, mec gene presence, PFGE, spa type, SCCmec-type, presence of PVL genes and multi-locus-sequence-type (MLST). S. aureus was carried by 28.4% of the 379 screened children-parents pairs. MRSA was detected in 45% of S. aureus isolates, that is, in 12% of the study population. A single ST22-MRSA-IVa, spa t223, PVL-gene negative strain was detected in 64% of MRSA isolates. This strain is typically susceptible to all non-β-lactam antibiotics tested. The only predictor for MRSA carriage in children was having an MRSA carrier-parent (OR = 25.5, P = 0.0004). Carriage of the Gaza strain was not associated with prior hospitalization. The Gaza strain was closely related genetically to a local MSSA spa t223 strain and less so to EMRSA15, one of the pandemic hospital-acquired-MRSA clones, scarcely reported in the community. The rapid spread in the community may be due to population determinants or due to yet unknown advantageous features of this particular strain.
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