Community Acquired Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (CA-MRSA) Skin Infections
Basics
- CA-MRSA affects healthy hosts, unlike hospital-acquired MRSA.
- Causes mainly skin and soft tissue infections (abscesses, furuncles, carbuncles).
- Severe infections: osteomyelitis, sepsis, necrotizing fasciitis, necrotizing pneumonia.
- System(s) affected: skin, soft tissue.
Epidemiology
- Affects all ages, generally younger; female > male.
- SSTI incidence peaked ~2010; pediatric rates declined after 2011.
- 25-30% of U.S. colonized with S. aureus; ~7% with MRSA.
- CA-MRSA isolated in ~60% of ED SSTIs; accounts for up to 75% of staphylococcal infections in children.
Etiology and Pathophysiology
- Epidemic began ~1999; USA300 clone predominant.
- Distinguished from HA-MRSA by:
- Lack of multidrug resistance.
- Presence of exotoxin virulence factors.
- Type IV staphylococcal cassette chromosome carrying mecA gene.
Risk Factors
- 50% have no obvious risk.
- Antibiotic use in past month (cephalosporins, fluoroquinolones).
- Abscess or "spider bite" history.
- IV/intradermal drug use, HIV, dialysis catheter.
- Close contact, daycare attendance, long-term care, athletes, incarceration.
Prevention
- CA-MRSA colonizes nares, oropharynx, inguinal areas.
- Transmitted via environmental/household contact.
- CDC prevention guidance for athletes.
Diagnosis
- History: risk factors, prior CA-MRSA, “spider bite” confusion.
- Exam: abscess with cellulitis; erythema, warmth, tenderness, fluctuance.
- Culture purulent lesions if systemic signs or immunocompromised.
- Ultrasound to differentiate abscess vs cellulitis; abscess <0.4 cm may not need I&D.
- Imaging (CT/MRI) only if necrotizing fasciitis suspected; do not delay surgery.
Differential Diagnosis
- SSTIs caused by other organisms.
Treatment
General
- Incision and drainage (I&D) for abscesses; loop drainage alternative.
- Antibiotics guided by culture and local susceptibility.
- Extended antibiotics not needed for nonsuppurative cellulitis.
- No routine decolonization recommended.
- Restrict contact if wounds uncovered.
- Elevate affected area.
Medications
First Line
- TMP/SMX DS 1-2 tabs PO q12h (children: 8-12 mg/kg/day TMP).
- Doxycycline 100 mg PO q12h (children >8 years dosing adjusted).
-
Clindamycin 300-450 mg PO q6h (check D-zone test for inducible resistance).
-
CA-MRSA resistant to β-lactams, often macrolides and quinolones.
- Rifampin not used as monotherapy.
Second Line (Severe/HA-MRSA)
- Vancomycin IV 1 g q12h (children 40 mg/kg/day).
- Linezolid 600 mg IV/PO q12h (children dosing varies).
- Clindamycin IV 600 mg q8h.
- Daptomycin 4 mg/kg/day IV (avoid if pulmonary involvement).
- Ceftaroline 600 mg IV q12h (pediatric dosing variable).
Special Populations
- Tetracyclines contraindicated <8 years.
- TMP/SMX not recommended <2 months.
- Daptomycin not for <1 year.
- Tetracyclines contraindicated in pregnancy; TMP/SMX avoided in 1st/3rd trimester.
Referral
- Infectious disease consult if refractory or decolonization planned.
- Surgical consult for serious SSTIs (necrotizing fasciitis).
Admission Criteria
- Systemic illness, extensive SSTI, comorbidities, immunocompromise.
- SSTI complications (sepsis, necrotizing fasciitis).
- Alternatives: observation units, outpatient parenteral therapy.
Ongoing Care
- Follow up in 48 hours for outpatients.
- Monitor for systemic symptoms or worsening.
Patient Education
- Cover draining wounds.
- Hand hygiene with soap and water (alcohol sanitizers ineffective).
- Avoid sharing contaminated personal items.
- Clean contaminated surfaces with diluted bleach solution.
- CDC MRSA education resources.
Prognosis
- Improvement expected within 48 hours in outpatients.
Complications
- Necrotizing pneumonia, empyema.
- Necrotizing fasciitis.
- Sepsis syndrome.
- Pyomyositis, osteomyelitis.
- Purpura fulminans.
- Disseminated septic emboli, endocarditis.
Clinical Pearls:
- Incise and drain abscesses; send for culture.
- Local susceptibility guides empiric antibiotic therapy.
- TMP/SMX, doxycycline, and clindamycin are first-line oral agents for uncomplicated infections.
- Expect improvement within 48 hours.