Vol. 38 No. 6 (2021): Diciembre
Original Article

Nasal carriage, antibiotype and genotype of isolated Staphylococcus aureus from Medicine and Nursing students of Campus San Felipe, University of Valparaiso, Chile, during 2017

Carmen Gloria Aravena Molló
Universidad de Valparaíso
Bio
Javiera Cáceres B
Universidad de Valparaíso
Bio
Adolfo Bastías A
Universidad de Valparaíso
Bio
Juan Francisco Opazo
Universidad de Valparaíso
Bio
Yasna Magna
Universidad de Valparaíso
Bio
Claudia Saralegui
Instituto Ramón y Cajal de Investigaciones Sanitarias, Madrid.
Bio
Camila Quintana
Universidad de Valparaíso
Bio
Rosa Del Campo
Instituto Ramón y Cajal de Investigaciones Sanitarias, Madrid.
Bio

Published 2022-01-24

How to Cite

1.
Aravena Molló CG, Cáceres B J, Bastías A A, Opazo JF, Magna Y, Saralegui C, Quintana C, Del Campo R. Nasal carriage, antibiotype and genotype of isolated Staphylococcus aureus from Medicine and Nursing students of Campus San Felipe, University of Valparaiso, Chile, during 2017. Rev. Chilena. Infectol. [Internet]. 2022 Jan. 24 [cited 2025 Nov. 25];38(6). Available from: https://revinf.cl/index.php/revinf/article/view/718

Abstract

Background: Staphylococcus aureus is part of the nasal microbiota in 20-30% of the population. This colonization is also a reservoir for its dissemination, which is worrying in the case of strains with resistance to methicillin (MRSA). Aim: To determine S. aureus nasal carriage in nursing and medical students of San Felipe Campus and characterize theirs isolates. Methods: During 2017, nasal swabs were taken from 225 students and seeded in salt manitol agar. Antibiotypes were determined by agar diffusion and the genetic clonality was assessed by PFGE and MLST in isolated S. aureus. SCCmec cassette and Panton-Valentine leukocidin gene (pvl) presence were determined in the MRSA isolates. Results:  61 students carried S. aureus (27.1%) including two MRSA strains (0.9%). S. aureus showed resistance to penicillin (75%), erythromycin (14%) and clindamycin (10%), chloramphenicol (1.6%) and levofloxacin, oxacillin, cefoxitin (3.3%).  Nineteen PFGE-types were differentiated, and their sequence-types coincided with main clonal complexes described in S. aureus carriers from different places worldwide: CC30, CC8, CC97, CC15, CC22 and CC1. MRSA strains belonged to CC5 and they corresponded to the Chilean/Cordobes and USA100NY/J clones. Conclusion: Nasal carriage of S. aureus and MRSA in students, coincided with the general population and sensitive-methicillin strains showed clonal diversity and high antimicrobial susceptibility except for penicillin.