Hovi Tapani, Ollgren Jukka, Savolainen-Kopra Carita
Department of Infectious Diseases, Viral Infections Unit, National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL), P.O. Box 30, FIN-00271, Helsinki, Finland.
BMC Infect Dis. 2017 Jan 9;17(1):47. doi: 10.1186/s12879-016-2157-z.
Variable exposure to causative agents of acute respiratory (RTI) or gastrointestinal tract infections (GTI) is a significant confounding factor in the analysis of the efficacy of interventions concerning these infections. We had an exceptional opportunity to reanalyze a previously published dataset from a trial assessing the effect of enhanced hand hygiene on the occurrence of RTI or GTI in adults, after adjustment for reported exposure and other covariates.
Twenty-one working units (designated clusters) each including at least 50 office employees, totaling 1,270 persons, were randomized into two intervention arms (either using water-and-soap or alcohol-rub in hand cleansing), or in the control arm. Self-reported data was collected through weekly emails and included own symptoms of RTI or GTI, and exposures to other persons with similar symptoms. Differences in the weekly occurrences of RTI and GTI symptoms between the arms were analyzed using multilevel binary regression model with log link with personal and cluster specific random effects, self-reported exposure to homologous disease, randomization triplet, and seasonality as covariates in the Bayesian framework.
Over the 16 months duration of the trial, 297 persons in the soap and water arm, 238 persons in the alcohol-based hand rub arm, and 230 controls sent reports. The arms were similar in age distribution and gender ratios. A temporally-associated reported exposure strongly increased the risk of both types of infection in all trial arms. Persons in the soap-and-water arm reported a significantly - about 24% lower weekly prevalence of GTI than the controls whether they had observed an exposure or not during the preceding week, while for RTI, this intervention reduced the prevalence only during weeks without a reported exposure. Alcohol-rub did not affect the symptom prevalence.
We conclude that while frequent and careful hand washing with soap and water partially protected office-working adults from GTI, the effect on RTI was only marginal in this study. Potential reasons for this difference include partially different transmission routes and a difference in the virus load. In this trial, frequent standardized hand rubbing with ethanol-based disinfectant did not reduce the weekly prevalence of either type of infections.
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00821509, 12 March 2009.
在分析针对急性呼吸道感染(RTI)或胃肠道感染(GTI)的干预措施疗效时,接触这些感染病原体的情况存在差异是一个重要的混杂因素。在对报告的暴露情况和其他协变量进行调整后,我们获得了一个特殊的机会,对之前发表的一项评估强化手部卫生对成人群体RTI或GTI发生率影响的试验数据集进行重新分析。
21个工作单位(指定为群组),每个单位至少有50名办公室员工,共计1270人,被随机分为两个干预组(一组使用水和肥皂洗手,另一组使用含酒精洗手液)或对照组。通过每周发送电子邮件收集自我报告的数据,包括自身的RTI或GTI症状,以及接触有类似症状其他人的情况。在贝叶斯框架下,使用具有对数链接的多级二元回归模型,将个人和群组特定随机效应、自我报告的同源疾病暴露、随机化三联体和季节性作为协变量,分析各组之间RTI和GTI症状每周发生率的差异。
在为期16个月的试验中,使用肥皂和水洗手组有297人、使用含酒精洗手液组有238人以及对照组有230人发送了报告。各组在年龄分布和性别比例上相似。在所有试验组中,与时间相关的报告暴露显著增加了两种感染类型的风险。无论前一周是否观察到暴露情况,使用肥皂和水洗手组报告的GTI每周患病率均显著低于对照组,约低24%;而对于RTI,这种干预措施仅在未报告暴露的周内降低了患病率。使用含酒精洗手液并未影响症状患病率。
我们得出结论,虽然频繁且仔细地用肥皂和水洗手能部分保护办公室工作的成年人免受GTI感染,但在本研究中对RTI的影响甚微。这种差异的潜在原因包括部分不同的传播途径和病毒载量的差异。在本试验中,频繁使用基于乙醇的消毒剂进行标准化手部擦拭并未降低任何一种感染类型的每周患病率。
ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT00821509,2009年3月12日。