| Literature DB >> 23151152 |
Tatiana V Gurieva1, Martin C J Bootsma, Marc J M Bonten.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Control of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) transmission has been unsuccessful in many hospitals. Recommended control measures include isolation of colonized patients, rather than decolonization of carriage among patients and/or health care workers. Yet, the potential effects of such measures are poorly understood.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23151152 PMCID: PMC3526562 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-12-302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Parameters in the model
| Average length of stay in intensive care units | 4 days | [ |
| Average length of stay in regular ward | 7 days | UMC |
| Admission from another hospitals | 5% | UMC |
| Staff : patient ratio in intensive care units | 1:1 | UMC |
| Staff : patient ratio in regular ward | 5:18 | UMC |
| Staff : patient ratio of HCWs not restricted to single wards | ~1:8.7 | UMC |
| Duration of colonization in extramural population (mean) | 370 days | [ |
| Transmission risk intensive care units : regular ward | 3:1 | Assumption |
| Specificity of rapid diagnostic test | 96% | [ |
| Sensitivity of rapid diagnostic test | 93% | [ |
| Turnaround time of rapid diagnostic test | 1 day | [ |
| Specificity of conventional microbiological test (back-up test) | 100% | Gold standard test assumed to be perfect |
| Sensitivity of conventional microbiological test (back-up test) | 100% | Gold standard test assumed to be perfect |
| Turnaround time of conventional microbiological test (back-up test) | 4 days | [ |
UMC-parameters estimated from data from University Medical Center Utrecht.
Figure 1Patient prevalence level of MRSA as function of the efficacy of patient decolonization or isolation after 3 months, 1 year and 5 years. 88% of the patients are screened upon hospital admission. Carriers are either decolonized (red lines) or isolated (blue lines). The left figure corresponds to a high endemicity level, the right figure to a medium endemicity level.
Figure 2The effects of health care worker decolonization on the patient prevalence level of MRSA. Scenarios I and II, correspond to the relative importance of persistently colonized health care workers (HCW) in the spread of MRSA (being 50% and 10 %, respectively) in the endemic situation. Scenarios A and B correspond to different values for the percentage of persistently colonized HCWs. Results are based on 50 runs of the stochastic simulation model. The lines represent the average hospital-wide MRSA patient prevalence, starting from the baseline scenario of an average patient prevalence of 14% (high endemicity level). The red line represents the patient prevalence with patient decolonization (100% efficacious ) and the other lines represent the patient prevalence with health care worker decolonization (100% efficacious) performed once per year (blue), twice per year (purple) and every month (yellow).
Figure 3Effect of combining patient isolation with decolonization of health care workers. The two graphs correspond to scenarios with minimum effect of decolonization of HCWs (A) (10% of HCWs are persistently colonized and responsible for 10% of acquisitions ) and maximum (B) (1% of HCWs is persistently colonized and responsible for 50% of acquisitions). The effect of patient decolonization (100% efficacious) is added for comparison.
Figure 4Effect of the patient isolation efficacy when combined with biannual decolonization of health care workers. The two graphs correspond to scenarios with minimum effect of decolonization of HCWs (A) (10% of the HCWs are persistently colonized and responsible for 10% of acquisitions) and maximum (B) (1% of the HCWs is persistently colonized and responsible for 50% of acquisitions). The efficacy of HCW decolonization is 100%. Lines with patient decolonization (100% efficacious) and only isolation (50% efficacious) are added for comparison.