Treatment of invasive infections due to community acquired methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus
Abstract
Infections caused to community-acquired methicillinresistant Staphylococcus aureus ( CA-MRSA ) is an emerging problem due to its high virulence and large capacity of spread. For invasive infections, published recommendations suggest vancomycin as the drug of choice. However, it is unclear whether other alternatives might be better in certain situations, or if the use of combinations of antibiotics would be beneficial. No studies has been done to suggest that any therapeutic alternative is better than another for the treatment of patients with invasive CA-MRSA infections, so the decisions you make are based on extrapolation of data from studies in other contexts or expert opinion. Therefore, this review is presented, in order to put in the hands of infectologist and others specialists
the available evidence, in order to find the best treatment options for these infections.