Cumulative incidence of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium detection by patient characteristics or possible exposures: prioritization of patients for active screening culture
K. Furuya , T. Yamagishi , K. Suzuki , K. Sugiyama , M. Yamamoto , M. Koyama , A. Yamada , R. Sasaki , J. Kurioka , H. Kurai , K. Tanaka , M. Nakagawa , Y. Kanazawa , S. Onoda , H. Inoue , M. Koshiko , H. Kurosu , T. Shimada , T. Sunagawa , M. Sugai , Y. Hakamata
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
The target population for active surveillance culture (ASC) of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus species (VRE) by stool or rectal swabs has not been fully determined during VRE outbreaks in healthcare settings in non-VRE endemic situation.
Aim
To evaluate cumulative incidences of VRE detection during a vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium outbreak to determine reasonable target populations for ASC.
Methods
Cases included inpatients whose first VRE-positive sample was obtained at Shizuoka General Hospital between February 2022 and January 2023, during which we conducted admission screening for possible high-risk patients, bi-weekly screening of all inpatients, admission and discharge screening in the high-care unit, and screening of contacts in each ward using stool or rectal samples. We calculated cumulative incidences of VRE detection for those screened by patient characteristics or possible exposure.
Findings
Among 60 cases identified, 55 (92%) were by ASC. Cumulative incidence was higher for contacts (6.4%, 15/234) than for those identified by other screening methods (0.5%, 40/8565). Among the patients identified through admission screening, those previously hospitalized in areas of reported VRE outbreaks had the highest cumulative incidence (6.6%, 5/78) followed by patients requiring toilet assistance (3.7%, 6/161). A bundle approach including ASC and prompt contact precautions by the hospital infection control team, local public health centre, and local and national infection control experts helped terminate the outbreak in seven months.
Conclusion
Patients with contacts, prior hospitalization in areas with known VRE outbreaks, and who need toilet assistance appear to be high-risk populations for VRE detection and are candidates for ASC.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Hospital Infection is the editorially independent scientific publication of the Healthcare Infection Society. The aim of the Journal is to publish high quality research and information relating to infection prevention and control that is relevant to an international audience.
The Journal welcomes submissions that relate to all aspects of infection prevention and control in healthcare settings. This includes submissions that:
provide new insight into the epidemiology, surveillance, or prevention and control of healthcare-associated infections and antimicrobial resistance in healthcare settings;
provide new insight into cleaning, disinfection and decontamination;
provide new insight into the design of healthcare premises;
describe novel aspects of outbreaks of infection;
throw light on techniques for effective antimicrobial stewardship;
describe novel techniques (laboratory-based or point of care) for the detection of infection or antimicrobial resistance in the healthcare setting, particularly if these can be used to facilitate infection prevention and control;
improve understanding of the motivations of safe healthcare behaviour, or describe techniques for achieving behavioural and cultural change;
improve understanding of the use of IT systems in infection surveillance and prevention and control.