Vazquez J A, Boikov D, Boikov S G, Dajani A S
Department of Internal Medicine, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI, USA.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 1997 Jan;18(1):32-7. doi: 10.1086/647498.
To evaluate a possible common-source outbreak of Candida infections in the neonatal intensive-care unit. Systemic Candida infections increased from 6 to 11 cases (0.71 to 1.34 per 1,000 patient-days). In addition, Candida parapsilosis infections increased from 1 in 1992 to 10 in 1993.
Tertiary-care, teaching, pediatric institution with a 40-bed neonatal intensive-care unit (NICU). Clinical characteristics, associated conditions, and antimicrobial therapy were obtained from the medical records of all NICU patients with positive blood cultures for Candida during 1992 and 1993. Nineteen Candida isolates from 15 infants were studied retrospectively using contour-clamped homogeneous electric-field (CHEF) electrophoresis.
CHEF revealed eight karyotypes of C parapsilosis. Five isolates recovered from four patients shared one karyotype. The remaining isolates from seven infants all had distinctly different karyotypes.
The evidence was insufficient to implicate a single source of infection, even though four patients in the same unit had identical strain types. However, identical strains of C parapsilosis were associated geographically, suggesting that nosocomial acquisition of C parapsilosis through indirect patient contact in the NICU was possible. The CHEF technique yields unique patterns that may be used to delineate clinical isolates and to study the molecular epidemiology of candidal infections.
评估新生儿重症监护病房念珠菌感染可能的共同来源暴发情况。系统性念珠菌感染从6例增加至11例(每1000个患者日从0.71例增至1.34例)。此外,近平滑念珠菌感染从1992年的1例增至1993年的10例。
拥有40张床位的新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)的三级医疗教学儿科机构。从1992年和1993年所有血培养念珠菌阳性的NICU患者的病历中获取临床特征、相关病症及抗菌治疗情况。对15名婴儿的19株念珠菌分离株采用轮廓夹钳均匀电场(CHEF)电泳进行回顾性研究。
CHEF显示近平滑念珠菌有8种核型。从4名患者身上分离出的5株菌株具有相同核型。其余来自7名婴儿的分离株核型均明显不同。
尽管同一病房的4名患者菌株类型相同,但证据不足以表明存在单一感染源。然而,近平滑念珠菌相同菌株在地理位置上有关联,这表明在NICU通过患者间接接触获得近平滑念珠菌医院感染是有可能的。CHEF技术可产生独特图谱,可用于区分临床分离株及研究念珠菌感染的分子流行病学。