Martínez José A, Ruthazer Robin, Hansjosten Karen, Barefoot Laurie, Snydman David R
Division of Geographic Medicine and Infectious Disease and Clinical Care Research, Department of Medicine, Tufts New England Medical Center and Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
Arch Intern Med. 2003 Sep 8;163(16):1905-12. doi: 10.1001/archinte.163.16.1905.
Colonization pressure, proximity to another case, exposure to a nurse who cares for another case, enteral feeding, and the use of sucralfate, vancomycin hydrochloride, cephalosporins, or antibiotics are among the defined risk factors for acquisition of vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) in the intensive care unit (ICU) setting. However, the role of rooms with contaminated environmental surfaces has not been well delineated.
Retrospective case-control study conducted on patients admitted to the medical ICU (MICU) of a tertiary-care, university-affiliated medical center during a 9-month period. Patients who acquired VRE (cases) were matched with 2 randomly selected control subjects who did not acquire VRE and had been in the MICU for at least the same number of days.
Thirty cases were matched with 60 appropriate controls. Cases were more likely to have been in the hospital for longer than 7 days before MICU admission (P =.009); to have occupied a specific room with persisting contaminated surfaces (P =.06); to have had a central venous catheter (P =.05); to have received vancomycin (P =.02), cephalosporins (P =.03), and quinolones (P =.006) before MICU admission; and to have received vancomycin (P =.02) and metronidazole sodium phosphate (P =.03) after MICU admission. Multivariate analysis showed that a hospital stay of longer than 1 week before MICU admission (P =.04), use of vancomycin before or after MICU admission (P =.03), use of quinolones before MICU admission (P =.03), and placement in a contaminated room (P =.02) were the best predictors of VRE acquisition.
Among all other factors associated with VRE transmission, VRE acquisition may depend on room contamination, even after extensive cleaning. This study underscores the need for better cleaning and the role of the environment in transmission of VRE.
在重症监护病房(ICU)环境中,定植压力、与另一病例的接近程度、接触护理另一病例的护士、肠内喂养以及使用硫糖铝、盐酸万古霉素、头孢菌素或抗生素是获得耐万古霉素肠球菌(VRE)的既定风险因素。然而,环境表面受污染的病房所起的作用尚未得到明确界定。
对一家三级医疗、大学附属医疗中心的内科重症监护病房(MICU)在9个月期间收治的患者进行回顾性病例对照研究。获得VRE的患者(病例组)与2名随机选择的未获得VRE且在MICU住院天数至少相同的对照受试者进行匹配。
30例病例与60名合适的对照匹配。病例组在入住MICU前住院时间超过7天的可能性更大(P = 0.009);曾入住环境表面持续受污染的特定病房(P = 0.06);曾有中心静脉导管(P = 0.05);在入住MICU前接受过万古霉素(P = 0.02)、头孢菌素(P = 0.03)和喹诺酮类药物(P = 0.006)治疗;在入住MICU后接受过万古霉素(P = 0.02)和甲硝唑磷酸钠(P = 0.03)治疗。多变量分析显示,入住MICU前住院时间超过1周(P = 0.04)、入住MICU前后使用万古霉素(P = 0.03)、入住MICU前使用喹诺酮类药物(P = 0.03)以及安置在受污染病房(P = 0.02)是获得VRE的最佳预测因素。
在与VRE传播相关的所有其他因素中,即使经过彻底清洁,获得VRE可能仍取决于病房污染情况。本研究强调了更好清洁的必要性以及环境在VRE传播中的作用。