| Literature DB >> 21980062 |
Julie V Robotham1, Nicholas Graves, Barry D Cookson, Adrian G Barnett, Jennie A Wilson, Jonathan D Edgeworth, Rahul Batra, Brian H Cuthbertson, Ben S Cooper.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the cost effectiveness of screening, isolation, and decolonisation strategies in the control of meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in intensive care units.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21980062 PMCID: PMC3188660 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.d5694
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138

Fig 1 Model schematic showing possible movements of patients (dotted arrows) and transitions between states (solid arrows). MRSA=meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus
Combinations of screening and interventions for the control of meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in patients on intensive care units
| Screening | Screening method | Intervention | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient group* | Timing | Procedure | ||
| No screening | Conventional culture of clinical swabs only | MRSA positive | On result | Isolation or decolonisation (chlorhexidine) |
| No screening | Conventional culture of clinical swabs only | All patients | Pre-emptively | Isolation or decolonisation (chlorhexidine) |
| No screening | Conventional culture of clinical swabs only | High risk patients | Pre-emptively | Isolation or decolonisation (chlorhexidine) |
| All patients | Conventional culture | High risk patients | Pre-emptively (amended on screen result) | Isolation† |
| All patients on admission, and weekly thereafter | Conventional culture | MRSA positive | On result | Isolation or decolonisation (mupirocin) |
| Chromogenic agar | MRSA positive | On 48 hour result | Isolation or decolonisation (mupirocin) | |
| MRSA positive | On 24 hour result (amended on 48 hour result) | Isolation† | ||
| Polymerase chain reaction | MRSA positive | On result | Isolation or decolonisation (mupirocin) | |
| High risk patients on admission, and weekly thereafter | Conventional culture | MRSA positive | On result | Isolation or decolonisation (mupirocin) |
| Chromogenic agar | MRSA positive | On 48 hour result | Isolation or decolonisation (mupirocin) | |
| MRSA positive | On 24 hour result (amended on 48 hour result) | Isolation† | ||
| Polymerase chain reaction | MRSA positive | On result | Isolation or decolonisation (mupirocin) | |
In all strategies, if MRSA was recovered from a clinical specimen the patient was isolated or decolonised according to the specified intervention.
*MRSA positive patients are believed to be colonised or infected with MRSA based on clinical or screening swab result.
†Decolonisation not applicable.
Values and sources of parameters. Values are means (standard deviations) or [values for sensitivity analyses] unless stated otherwise
| Parameters | Values | Sources |
|---|---|---|
| Prevalence of MRSA on admission | 0.05 [0.02 and 0.10] | 1, 5-9 |
| Prevalence of MRSA in high risk patients on admission | 2.4×prevalence of MRSA on admission | 10, 11 |
| Proportion of high risk patients | 0.18 [0.36] | 10, 11 |
| No of intensive care unit beds | 10 [5 and 20] | ICNARC |
| Daily probability of cross colonisation per source* | 0.0037 (0.00043) | Analysis of individual data (see web extra appendix 2) |
| Daily probability of cross infection per source* | 0.0006 (0.00023) | |
| Daily probability of progression from colonisation to infection* | 0.047 (0.0094) | |
| Conventional culture†: | ||
| Sensitivity (%)‡ | 68.15 (19.39) | 12-14 |
| Specificity (%)‡ | 88.23 (6.33) | |
| Turnaround time (days)§ | 4 | 15-17 |
| Chromogenic agar (48 hour result): | ||
| Sensitivity (%)‡ | 82.55 (4.27) | 18-22 |
| Specificity (%)‡ | 83.05 (17.72) | |
| Turnaround time (days)§ | 3 | 15, 17, 18, 20 |
| Chromogenic agar (24 hour result): | ||
| Sensitivity (%)* | 62.17 (12.49) | 13, 18, 20-22 |
| Specificity (%)* | 97.13 (4.17) | |
| Turnaround time (days)§ | 2 | 17 |
| Polymerase chain reaction: | ||
| Sensitivity (%)‡ | 88.40 (5.10) | 16, 19, 22-29 |
| Specificity (%)‡ | 83.8 (4.74) | |
| Turnaround time (days)§ | 1 | 16, 17, 19, 24, 26 |
| Transmissibility of patient undergoing isolation precautions (% reduction) | 36.5 (62.2) | 30 |
| Treated patients who reverted to MRSA negative state (%) | 53 [0 and 100] | 31 [assumptions] |
| Effect on susceptibility to colonisation (% reduction): | ||
| Bodywash (chlorhexidine) | 65 (7) | Analysis of individual data |
| Topical therapy (mupirocin) | 0 [33] | Assumption [¶] |
| Effect on susceptibility to infection (% reduction): | ||
| Bodywash (chlorhexidine) | 66 (21) | Analysis of individual data |
| Topical therapy (mupirocin) | 0 [10] | Assumption [¶] |
| Effect on transmissibility of infectious patient (% reduction): | ||
| Topical therapy (mupirocin) | 0 [12.5] | Assumption [¶] |
| % reduction in probability of progression or self infection: | ||
| Bodywash (chlorhexidine) | 31 (18) | Analysis of individual data |
| Topical therapy (mupirocin) | 33 (12) [47] | 32 [¶] |
ICNARC=Intensive Care National Audit and Research Centre.
For sensitivity analysis all values expressed as percentages are assumed to follow normal distributions, truncated at 100%.
*Probability of transmission from single MRSA source to single susceptible patient on same ward.
†Medium containing mannitol, salt, and oxacillin.
‡Arithmetic mean (standard deviation) from listed source.
§Means of reported laboratory processing times, adjusted to account for ward delays as estimated in Harbarth et al 2006.17
¶Estimates obtained from formal elicitation of expert opinion (see web extra appendix 2 for methods).

Fig 2 Cost effectiveness acceptability curves and frontiers for screening and decolonisation strategies. Each line on cost effectiveness acceptability curve represents the proportion of simulations for a particular strategy that are cost effective, under a range of values for willingness to pay for health benefits. Lines in cost effectiveness acceptability frontiers depict scenarios with highest expected net monetary benefit, dependent on willingness to pay for health benefits. The first frontier compares all strategies; the second excludes universal decolonisation

Fig 3 Use of isolation under each screening and isolation strategy, showing appropriate isolation (isolation of MRSA positive patients), inappropriate isolation (isolation of MRSA negative patients), and bed days spent unisolated while MRSA positive

Fig 4 Patient outcomes under each screening and isolation strategy, showing new acquisitions (transmissions) of MRSA by patients in an intensive care unit, total number of MRSA infections in an intensive care unit, and total number of deaths (all per 100 admissions)

Fig 5 Cost effectiveness acceptability curves and frontier for screening and isolation strategies. Lines in cost effectiveness acceptability frontier depict strategies with highest expected net monetary benefit dependent on willingness to pay for health benefits