A multicentre outbreak of ST45 MRSA containing deletions in the spa gene in New South Wales, Australia

2020 ◽  
Vol 75 (5) ◽  
pp. 1112-1116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alicia G Beukers ◽  
Peter Newton ◽  
Bernard Hudson ◽  
Kimberly Ross ◽  
Thomas Gottlieb ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Early identification of MRSA by diagnostic medical microbiology laboratories enables improved antimicrobial choice and outcomes. The Cepheid Xpert® MRSA/SA BC test rapidly identifies Staphylococcus aureus bloodstream infections through spa gene detection and methicillin resistance via mecA gene detection. Recent emergence of S. aureus with deletions in the spa gene has resulted in false-negative results for this test, leading to misidentification of infections with this organism, particularly MRSA ST45. Objectives To investigate the emergence and prevalence of ST45 MRSA in New South Wales (NSW), Australia. Methods WGS read data from six NSW hospitals were collected for 131 ST45 MRSA isolates and analysed. Results Of the 131 ST45 MRSA investigated, 88.5% (116/131) contained a deletion in the spa gene that appeared to have arisen once in approximately 2010 followed by clonal expansion. Given the successful establishment of this ‘spa-deletion’ MRSA clone, the Cepheid Xpert® MRSA/SA BC test became unreliable for confirming S. aureus bacteraemia in NSW. Subsequently, the algorithm used by this test has been updated and evaluated to take into account the presence of S. aureus with either a spa deletion or SCCmec target variations. Conclusions This study highlighted the applied use of WGS for assessing diagnostic assays and informing necessary changes to ensure the viability of the Cepheid Xpert® MRSA/SA BC test in the context of the new ‘spa-deletion’ MRSA clone. It demonstrated how continued surveillance through WGS can reveal evolutionary events that may impact diagnostic assays, allowing corrective modifications to be made in real time.

2020 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 144
Author(s):  
Ben Hope ◽  
Todd Soderquist ◽  
Mark D. B. Eldridge

Whether the eastern quoll (Dasyurus viverrinus) is extinct on mainland Australia, particularly New South Wales (NSW), is the focus of this study. The species declined rapidly during the mid to late 1800s in parts of south-east Australia and in the early 1900s around Bega (New South Wales). The last definite live individual was recorded at Vaucluse, NSW in 1963. The recent emergence of a specimen from Barrington Tops, NSW, in 1989 caused much public interest and enabled us to seek reports of sightings after we advertised publicly for any records. Here we document numerous post-1963 records, the most noteworthy including: a photograph of an eastern quoll (reported to be taken in 2013 in the Nungatta area of NSW), records from Wollemi National Park (2002 and 2006) and multiple observations from the 1990s from around Barrington Tops and Carrai. There has been insufficient recent mammal survey effort to definitively support these public reports but at this stage there are sufficient recent credible records to consider that this species may not be extinct on mainland Australia.


Author(s):  
Sean Randall ◽  
Anna Ferrante ◽  
James Boyd ◽  
Adrian Brown

IntroductionRecord linkage is inherently uncertain, with all linkages containing some amount of false positive and false negative errors. Previous results have suggested that linkage error may not be evenly distributed throughout the population, with particular subgroups exhibiting higher rates of linkage error. Record linkage is inherently uncertain, with all linkages containing Objectives and ApproachThis study investigated the distribution of linkage error using four large-scale Australian administrative datasets; hospital admissions datasets from Western Australia and New South Wales, and emergency presentation datasets from New South Wales and South Australia. Each dataset had been previously de-duplicated to a very high standard, with large scale manual review taking place; these results were used as our truth set. Each dataset was linked using probabilistic record linkage with results (precision and recall) compared by gender, age, geographic indices of remoteness and socioeconomic status. ResultsResults were highly dataset dependent. Consistent findings were lower linkage quality found for individuals living in remote locations, and lower linkage quality in those in the youngest category (those born after 1980). Some datasets showed lower linkage quality for females, for those in middle age as compared to the elderly, and for those with lower socioeconomic status. The differences in linkage quality found were typically small. Changes in threshold settings had generally no effect on the relationship between sociodemographic characteristics and linkage quality. Conclusion/ImplicationsLinkage studies focussing on younger individuals and those in remote areas may have greater uncertainty regarding their results. Targeting efforts by linkage units may be required to ensure even distribution of linkage errors. Further research is required into investigating how linkage errors effect research outcomes.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document