Muto Carlene A, Jernigan John A, Ostrowsky Belinda E, Richet Hervé M, Jarvis William R, Boyce John M, Farr Barry M
Division of Hospital Epidemiology and Infection Control, UPMC-P, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213, USA.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2003 May;24(5):362-86. doi: 10.1086/502213.
Infection control programs were created three decades ago to control antibiotic-resistant healthcare-associated infections, but there has been little evidence of control in most facilities. After long, steady increases of MRSA and VRE infections in NNIS System hospitals, the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA) Board of Directors made reducing antibiotic-resistant infections a strategic SHEA goal in January 2000. After 2 more years without improvement, a SHEA task force was appointed to draft this evidence-based guideline on preventing nosocomial transmission of such pathogens, focusing on the two considered most out of control: MRSA and VRE.
Medline searches were conducted spanning 1966 to 2002. Pertinent abstracts of unpublished studies providing sufficient data were included.
Frequent antibiotic therapy in healthcare settings provides a selective advantage for resistant flora, but patients with MRSA or VRE usually acquire it via spread. The CDC has long-recommended contact precautions for patients colonized or infected with such pathogens. Most facilities have required this as policy, but have not actively identified colonized patients with surveillance cultures, leaving most colonized patients undetected and unisolated. Many studies have shown control of endemic and/or epidemic MRSA and VRE infections using surveillance cultures and contact precautions, demonstrating consistency of evidence, high strength of association, reversibility, a dose gradient, and specificity for control with this approach. Adjunctive control measures are also discussed.
Active surveillance cultures are essential to identify the reservoir for spread of MRSA and VRE infections and make control possible using the CDC's long-recommended contact precautions.
感染控制项目在三十年前设立,旨在控制与医疗保健相关的抗生素耐药性感染,但在大多数医疗机构中,几乎没有控制成效的证据。在国家医疗保健安全网络(NNIS)系统医院中,耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌(MRSA)和耐万古霉素肠球菌(VRE)感染长期稳步增加后,美国医疗保健流行病学学会(SHEA)董事会于2000年1月将减少抗生素耐药性感染作为SHEA的一项战略目标。在又经过两年仍无改善之后,SHEA任命了一个特别工作组来起草这份关于预防此类病原体医院内传播的循证指南,重点关注两种被认为最失控的病原体:MRSA和VRE。
对1966年至2002年期间的医学文献数据库(Medline)进行检索。纳入了提供充分数据的未发表研究的相关摘要。
医疗机构中频繁使用抗生素治疗为耐药菌群提供了选择性优势,但感染MRSA或VRE的患者通常是通过传播而感染的。美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)长期以来一直建议对定植或感染此类病原体的患者采取接触预防措施。大多数医疗机构已将此作为政策要求,但并未通过监测培养积极识别定植患者,导致大多数定植患者未被发现和隔离。许多研究表明,通过监测培养和接触预防措施可控制MRSA和VRE的地方性和/或流行性感染,证明了证据的一致性、高关联强度、可逆性、剂量梯度以及这种控制方法的特异性。还讨论了辅助控制措施。
主动监测培养对于识别MRSA和VRE感染的传播源至关重要,并且使采用CDC长期推荐的接触预防措施进行控制成为可能。