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NHF: What does livestock-associated MRSA mean for the neighborhood?

Our monthly collaboration with the National Hog Farmer continues; this month Dr Peter Davies from the University of Minnesota, College of Veterinary Medicine,  explains what is livestock-associated MRSA and if it affects people living near pig farms.

“Livestock-associated” MRSA first isolated in 2004

Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) Source: Wikimedia Commons

Most people are likely familiar with MRSA (methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus), a flagship “superbug” that is a major concern to human medicine. And just about everybody in the pig industry has heard that certain variants of MRSA are very common in some livestock populations (including pigs), and these are referred to as “livestock-associated” MRSA (LA-MRSA).

A novel variant of MRSA (labelled ST398 using a DNA typing method) was first found in pigs in the Netherlands in 2004. Subsequently, ST398 MRSA and several other types (e.g., ST9 in Asia, ST5 in North America) were reported in pigs in numerous countries, and often in their caretakers as well. The discovery that pigs may be a large MRSA reservoir created some justifiable panic and confusion, raising questions about the implications for human health, particularly for industry workers (e.g., farmers, veterinarians, processing plant workers), pork consumers and, last but not least, people living in the neighborhood of pig farms.

Generally, LA-MRSA  lack most of the key “virulence factors” that enable the bacteria to cause clinical infections in people.

Human clinical infections by “livestock-associated” MRSA are rare

Although workers on MRSA-positive farms often harbor LA-MRSA in their nose, significant clinical infections in healthy workers have been rare. Human clinical infections with LA-MRSA do occur, but most cases tend to be of relatively mild disease (such as skin infections), with more severe infections typically limited to elderly and medically compromised patients.

Remembering that about 2% of healthy U.S. citizens carry human adapted variants of MRSA, the relative clinical importance of LA-MRSA appears to be minimal in most countries. Globally since 2004, there have been around 10 fatal cases of LA-MRSA infections reported, compared with about 50 fatal MRSA cases per day (18,650 per year in 2005) in the United States alone.

2016 study of Iowa hospitals found probable livestock variants in only 0.24% of MRSA cases, and 1% of S. aureus infections. In North Carolina, another leading swine-producing state, there were no LA-MRSA variants among more than 1,200 MRSA isolated from human bloodstream infections between 1995 and 2015 (Dr. Vance Fowler, Duke University, personal communication).

Living next to pig farms does not increase the risk of exposure

Although MRSA can be isolated from meat products, there is little evidence to suggest cause for concern about food-borne transmission. In contrast, conclusions of studies looking at the neighborhood risk of exposure to LA-MRSA from pig farms are conflicting. We will focus on the findings of studies that have compared pig workers and neighbors directly, measured the distance from pig barns to residences directly; and used laboratory testing to confirm the presence of LA-MRSA in the study populations. 

Across three early studies in Europe, LA-MRSA prevalence (nasal carriage) was greater than 180 times higher in 352 pig industry workers (44%) than in 2,094 rural residents without farm exposure (0.24%).

In summary, the overall impact of LA-MRSA relative to human variants remains very small in most countries including the United States. There is no evidence that residence in rural areas increases overall MRSA risk.

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