Ham D Cal, See Isaac, Novosad Shannon, Crist Matthew, Mahon Garrett, Fike Lucy, Spicer Kevin, Talley Pamela, Flinchum Andrea, Kainer Marion, Kallen Alexander J, Walters Maroya Spalding
Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA.
Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA.
J Hosp Infect. 2020 Apr 10. doi: 10.1016/j.jhin.2020.04.007.
Despite large reductions from 2005-2012, hospital-onset methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus bloodstream infections (HO MRSA BSIs) continue be a major source of morbidity and mortality.
To describe risk factors for and underlying sources of HO MRSA BSIs.
We investigated HO MRSA BSIs at eight high-burden short-stay acute care hospitals. A case was defined as first isolation of MRSA from a blood specimen collected in 2016 on hospital day ≥4 from a patient without an MRSA-positive blood culture in the 14 days prior. We reviewed case-patient demographics and risk factors by medical record abstraction. The potential clinical source(s) of infection were determined by consensus by a clinician panel.
Of the 195 eligible cases, 186 were investigated. Case-patients were predominantly male (63%); median age was 57 years (range 0-92). In the two weeks prior to the BSI, 88% of case-patients had indwelling devices, 31% underwent a surgical procedure, and 18% underwent dialysis. The most common locations of attribution were intensive care units (ICUs) (46%) and step-down units (19%). The most commonly identified non-mutually exclusive clinical sources were CVCs (46%), non-surgical wounds (17%), surgical site infections (16%), non-ventilator healthcare-associated pneumonia (13%), and ventilator-associated pneumonia (11%).
Device-and procedure-related infections were common sources of HO MRSA BSIs. Prevention strategies focused on improving adherence to existing prevention bundles for device-and procedure-associated infections and on source control for ICU patients, patients with certain indwelling devices, and patients undergoing certain high-risk surgeries are being pursued to decrease HO MRSA BSI burden at these facilities.
尽管2005年至2012年期间医院获得性耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌血流感染(HO MRSA BSIs)大幅减少,但它仍是发病和死亡的主要来源。
描述HO MRSA BSIs的危险因素和潜在来源。
我们在八家高负担的短期急性护理医院调查了HO MRSA BSIs。病例定义为2016年从住院≥4天的患者血液标本中首次分离出MRSA,且该患者在之前14天内无MRSA阳性血培养。我们通过病历摘要回顾了病例患者的人口统计学和危险因素。感染的潜在临床来源由临床医生小组通过共识确定。
在195例符合条件的病例中,186例进行了调查。病例患者以男性为主(63%);中位年龄为57岁(范围0 - 92岁)。在发生BSI的前两周,88%的病例患者有留置装置,31%接受了外科手术,18%接受了透析。最常见的归因地点是重症监护病房(ICU)(46%)和降级病房(19%)。最常确定的非相互排斥的临床来源是中心静脉导管(CVCs)(46%)、非手术伤口(17%)、手术部位感染(16%)、非呼吸机相关性医疗保健相关肺炎(13%)和呼吸机相关性肺炎(11%)。
与器械和操作相关的感染是HO MRSA BSIs的常见来源。目前正在推行预防策略,重点是提高对器械和操作相关感染现有预防方案的依从性,以及对ICU患者、有特定留置装置的患者和接受某些高风险手术的患者进行源头控制,以减轻这些机构中HO MRSA BSI的负担。