Brajendra K. Singh, Prabasaj Paul, Camden D. Gowler, Sujan C. Reddy, Rachel B. Slayton
{"title":"Decolonization of hospital patients may aid efforts to reduce transmission of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales","authors":"Brajendra K. Singh, Prabasaj Paul, Camden D. Gowler, Sujan C. Reddy, Rachel B. Slayton","doi":"10.1017/ash.2023.303","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Background: Multimodal approaches are often used to prevent transmission of antimicrobial-resistant pathogens among patients in healthcare settings; understanding the effect of individual interventions is challenging. We designed a model to compare the effectiveness of hand hygiene (HH) with or without decolonization in reducing patient colonization with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE). Methods: We developed an agent-based model to represent transmission of CRE in an acute-care hospital comprising 3 general wards and 2 ICUs, each with 20 single-occupancy rooms, located in a community of 85,000 people. The model accounted for the movement of healthcare personnel (HCP), including their visits to patients. CRE dynamics were modeled using a susceptible–infectious–susceptible framework with transmission occurring via HCP–patient contacts. The mean time to clearance of CRE colonization without intervention was 387 days (Zimmerman et al, 2013). Our baseline included a facility-level HH compliance of 30%, with an assumed efficacy of 50%. Contact precautions were employed for patients with CRE-positive cultures with assumed adherence and efficacy of 80% and 50%, respectively. Intervention scenarios included decolonization of culture-positive CRE patients, with a mean time to decolonization of 3 days. We considered 2 hypothetical intervention scenarios: (A) decolonization of patients with the baseline HH compliance and (B) decolonization with a slightly improved HH compliance of 35%. The hospital-level CRE incidence rate was used to compare the results from these intervention scenarios. Results: CRE incidence rates were lower in intervention scenarios than the baseline scenario (Fig. 1). The baseline mean incidence rate was 29.1 per 10,000 patient days. For decolonization with the baseline HH, the mean incidence rate decreased to 14.5 per 10,000 patient days, which is a 50.2% decrease relative to the baseline incidence (Table 1). The decolonization scenario with a slightly improved HH compliance of 35% produced a relative reduction of 71.9% relative to the baseline incidence. Conclusions: Our analysis shows that decolonization, combined with modest improvement in HH compliance, could lead to large decreases in pathogen transmission. In turn, this model implies that efforts to identify and improve decolonization strategies for better patient safety in health care may be needed and are worth exploring. Disclosures: None","PeriodicalId":7953,"journal":{"name":"Antimicrobial Stewardship & Healthcare Epidemiology","volume":"21 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Antimicrobial Stewardship & Healthcare Epidemiology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1017/ash.2023.303","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Multimodal approaches are often used to prevent transmission of antimicrobial-resistant pathogens among patients in healthcare settings; understanding the effect of individual interventions is challenging. We designed a model to compare the effectiveness of hand hygiene (HH) with or without decolonization in reducing patient colonization with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE). Methods: We developed an agent-based model to represent transmission of CRE in an acute-care hospital comprising 3 general wards and 2 ICUs, each with 20 single-occupancy rooms, located in a community of 85,000 people. The model accounted for the movement of healthcare personnel (HCP), including their visits to patients. CRE dynamics were modeled using a susceptible–infectious–susceptible framework with transmission occurring via HCP–patient contacts. The mean time to clearance of CRE colonization without intervention was 387 days (Zimmerman et al, 2013). Our baseline included a facility-level HH compliance of 30%, with an assumed efficacy of 50%. Contact precautions were employed for patients with CRE-positive cultures with assumed adherence and efficacy of 80% and 50%, respectively. Intervention scenarios included decolonization of culture-positive CRE patients, with a mean time to decolonization of 3 days. We considered 2 hypothetical intervention scenarios: (A) decolonization of patients with the baseline HH compliance and (B) decolonization with a slightly improved HH compliance of 35%. The hospital-level CRE incidence rate was used to compare the results from these intervention scenarios. Results: CRE incidence rates were lower in intervention scenarios than the baseline scenario (Fig. 1). The baseline mean incidence rate was 29.1 per 10,000 patient days. For decolonization with the baseline HH, the mean incidence rate decreased to 14.5 per 10,000 patient days, which is a 50.2% decrease relative to the baseline incidence (Table 1). The decolonization scenario with a slightly improved HH compliance of 35% produced a relative reduction of 71.9% relative to the baseline incidence. Conclusions: Our analysis shows that decolonization, combined with modest improvement in HH compliance, could lead to large decreases in pathogen transmission. In turn, this model implies that efforts to identify and improve decolonization strategies for better patient safety in health care may be needed and are worth exploring. Disclosures: None
背景:在卫生保健机构中,经常使用多模式方法来预防耐药病原体在患者之间的传播;理解个体干预的效果是具有挑战性的。我们设计了一个模型来比较手卫生(HH)在减少患者碳青霉烯耐药肠杆菌(CRE)定植方面的有效性。方法:我们开发了一个基于主体的模型来表示CRE在一家急症医院的传播,该医院包括3个普通病房和2个icu,每个icu有20个单人病房,位于一个85,000人的社区。该模型考虑了卫生保健人员(HCP)的流动,包括他们对患者的访问。CRE动力学采用易感-感染-易感框架,通过hcp -患者接触发生传播。在没有干预的情况下清除CRE定植的平均时间为387天(Zimmerman et al ., 2013)。我们的基线包括30%的设施级HH依从性,假设疗效为50%。对cre阳性培养的患者采取接触预防措施,假设依从性和有效性分别为80%和50%。干预方案包括培养阳性CRE患者去菌落,平均去菌落时间为3天。我们考虑了两种假设的干预方案:(A)基线HH依从性的患者去殖民化,(B)去殖民化,HH依从性略有改善,达到35%。采用医院水平的CRE发生率来比较这些干预方案的结果。结果:干预方案的CRE发病率低于基线方案(图1)。基线平均发病率为29.1 / 10,000患者日。对于基线HH去殖民化,平均发病率下降到14.5 / 10,000患者日,相对于基线发病率下降了50.2%(表1)。35%的HH依从性略有改善的去殖民化方案相对于基线发病率下降了71.9%。结论:我们的分析表明,去殖民化,加上HH依从性的适度改善,可能导致病原体传播的大幅减少。反过来,这一模式意味着,可能需要努力确定和改进非殖民化战略,以提高患者在保健方面的安全,这是值得探索的。披露:没有