| Literature DB >> 25248287 |
Vincent C C Cheng, Jonathan H K Chen, Josepha W M Tai, Sally C Y Wong, Rosana W S Poon, Ivan F N Hung, Kelvin K W To, Jasper F W Chan, Pak-Leung Ho, Chung-Mau Lo, Kwok-Yung Yuen1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prolonged asymptomatic carriage of vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) in the gastrointestinal tract and the lack of effective decolonization regimen perpetuate the endemicity of VRE in the healthcare settings. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25248287 PMCID: PMC4180964 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-14-514
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Protocol of vancomycin-resistant enterococci decolonization*
| 1. | Patient was managed in isolation room A and subjected to bowel preparation according to the protocol commonly used prior to colonoscopy examination: (i) ingestion of 2 liters of polyethylene glycol (Klean prep) over 6 hours to wash out the bowel content; (ii) taking fluid diet including rice water, clear soup, and fruit juice on the first day of decolonization. |
| 2. | When the defecated bowel content became clear fluid, patient was transferred from isolation room A to B, which had been terminally disinfected with sodium hypochlorite 1,000 ppm. |
| 3. | After transferal to isolation room B, a five-day course of medication with activity against VRE was given, including oral linezolid 600 mg every 12 hourly, orally-taken intravenous preparation of daptomycin 8 mg per kg daily. |
| 4. | At the same time, the patient was cleansed with 4% chlorhexidine bath and shampoo, and oral chlorhexidine gargle for 5 days. Where possible, avoid use of other antibiotics treatment during the decolonization period. |
| 5. | At the time of bathing, the patient’s clothes, underwear, and bed linens were replaced and sent for hot laundry daily. All personal belongings were disinfected to prevent re-colonization. The isolation room was thoroughly cleaned and disinfected by sodium hypochlorite 1,000 ppm twice daily. |
| 6. | After completion of 5-day decolonization regimen, |
| 7. | All foods and drinks throughout the decolonization procedure must be boiled. All visitors and healthcare workers must comply with hand hygiene with alcohol based hand rub. |
Note. VRE, vancomycin-resistant enterococci; *The decolonization protocol was designed and coordinated by the infection control team for all patients in Queen Mary Hospital. Infection control nurses closely monitored and audited the compliance of the procedures required for decolonization.
Figure 1Serial quantitative culture of gastrointestinal carriage of vancomycin-resistant and concomitant use of antimicrobial agents in case 1. Note. Intravenous meropenem 500 mg every 8 hourly was given between day 16 and 31 for recurrent isolation of extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing Klebsiella species in sputum; intravenous meropenem 500 mg every 8 hourly was given again between day 41 and 49 for low grade fever without microbiological documentation of infection; oral levofloxacin 750 mg daily was given between day 71 and 78 for urine isolation of extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing Klebsiella species; oral cotrimoxazole 480 mg twice daily was given after liver transplantation as pre-emptive prophylactic agent. The dotted horizontal line denoted the detection limit of VRE in fecal samples by broth enrichment ~ 200 cfu/g (2.3 log10 cfu/g).
Figure 2Serial quantitative culture of gastrointestinal carriage of vancomycin-resistant and concomitant use of antimicrobial agents in case 2. Note. Intravenous piperacillin-tazobactam 4.5 gm iv q12h, daptomycin 250 mg iv q12h, and metronidazole 500 mg iv q8h were given from day 3 for empirical treatment of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, while intravenous piperacillin-tazobactam 4.5 gm iv q12h, and daptomycin 250 mg iv q12h were given between day 45 and 56 for clinical diagnosis of another episode of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. The dotted horizontal line denoted the detection limit of VRE in fecal samples by broth enrichment ~ 200 cfu/g (2.3 log10 cfu/g).
Figure 3Serial quantitative culture of gastrointestinal carriage of vancomycin-resistant and concomitant use of antimicrobial agents in case 3. Note. Intravenous cefotaxime 1 gm iv q8h was given from the referral hospital and stopped on day 1 of hospitalization. Amoxicillin-clavulanate was given on day 20 and stepped up to piperacillin-tazobactam on day 24 of hospitalization for nosocomial onset of fever of unknown source. The dotted horizontal line denoted the detection limit of VRE in fecal samples by broth enrichment ~ 200 cfu/g (2.3 log10 cfu/g).
Figure 4Serial quantitative culture of gastrointestinal carriage of vancomycin-resistant and concomitant use of antimicrobial agents in case 4. Note. Intravenous ampicillin 2 gm iv q8h, and gentamicin 40 mg iv q8h were given from the referral hospital for treatment of infective endocarditis due to viridans streptococci. Antibiotic was changed to benzyl penicillin 3 MU iv q4h on day 7 upon clinical consultation to microbiologist, and stopped on day 17 of hospitalization after completion of treatment. Meropenem 500 mg iv q12h and one dose of daptomycin 350 mg iv was given on day 25 for systemic sepsis complicating mesenteric ischemia and bowel gangrene. Patient succumbed on day 26 of hospitalization despite maximal supportive therapy. The dotted horizontal line denoted the detection limit of VRE in fecal samples by broth enrichment ~ 200 cfu/g (2.3 log10 cfu/g).
Summary of gastrointestinal decolonization of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus by antimicrobial therapy
| Ref | Country/year of publication/study setting | Decolonization regimens/study end point(if mentioned) | Results at study end point | Microbiology culture methods/presence of broth enrichment or not |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | US/1994/observational study | Oral vancomycin 125 mg q6h for 10 daysa/follow up for 15 days post treatment | VRE negative in 8 (42%) of 19 patients | Campylobacter agar containing 10 μg/ml of vancomycin (B-D Microbiology Systems, Cockeysville, MD, USA)/no broth enrichment |
| [ | US/1994/observational study | Oral bacitracin 25,000 U (500 mg) q6h for 10 days/follow up for 15 days post treatment | VRE negative in 8 (100%) of 8 patients | Campylobacter agar containing 10 μg/ml of vancomycin (B-D Microbiology Systems, Cockeysville, MD, USA)/no broth enrichment |
| [ | US/1995/observational study | Oral novobiocin (500 mg q6h plus oral tetracycline 500 mg q6h (five patients) or intravenous doxycycline 100 mg q12h (one patient) for a median of 3.5 days (range, 1 to 6 days) | VRE negative in only one patient while receiving decolonization therapy | Not mentioned |
| [ | US/1995/observational study | Bacitracin 25,000 U (diluted in 5 mL of 0.9% normal saline) given orally or by gastrostomy tube twice a day for 10 days/follow up for 3 weeks post treatment | VRE negative in 5 (63%) of 8 patients | Not mentioned |
| [ | Canada/1999/prospective observational cohort study in a tertiary care institution | Oral doses of bacitracin solution (75,000 U/15 mL) four times daily and doxycycline 100 mg once daily for 14 days/follow up for 4 months | VRE negative in 15 (100%) of the antibiotic treated vs 8 (33.3%) of the untreated patients (P <0 .001) at the end of treatment; but VRE positive in 9 (60%) of 15 and 15 (62.5%) of 24 in the treated and untreated cohort (p = 0.86) following up for a mean of 127 and 130 days respectively b | M-enterococcal agar with vancomycin (6 mg/mL)/no broth enrichment |
| [ | US/2001/randomized, controlled study | Oral zinc bacitracin (50,000 U) q6h for 10 days vs placebo/follow up for 3 weeks post treatment | VRE negative in 2 (33%) of 6 patients in each group after 3 weeks post treatment | Bile esculin agar plates supplemented with 6 mg/mL of vancomycin/no broth enrichment |
| [ | US/2001/phase II, double-blinded, randomized, multicenter, placebo-controlled study | Oral ramoplanin: 2 daily doses of 100 mg or 400 mg or placebo for 7 days/follow up on day 0, 7, and 14 post treatment | Day 0: VRE negative in 17 (81%) of 21 and 18 (90%) of 20 patients in the 100-mg and 400-mg ramoplanin groups; Day 7: VRE negative in 6 (29%) of 21 and 7 (41%) of 17 in the 100-mg and 400-mg ramoplanin groups; Day 14: VRE negative in 4 (21%) of 19 and 5 (29%) of 17 patients in the 100-mg and 400-mg ramoplanin groupsc | Bile-esculin azide broth that contained 6 mg/mL of vancomycin (Hardy Diagnostics)/broth enrichment |
| [ | US/2002/observational study | Oral bacitracin (25,000 U three times daily) and oral gentamicin (80 mg three times daily) for a mean duration of 16 days (median, 14 days; range, 7 to 29 days)/follow up for 3 months post treatment | VRE negative in 5 (17.8%) of 28 patients | Not mentioned |
| [ | France/2010/observational study in a geriatric rehabilitation care facility | Oral bacitracin 30,000 U three times daily for 15 days/follow up for 6 months | VRE negative in 3 (43%) of 7 patients at the end of therapy and at 6 months | Not mentioned |
| [ | France/2010/observational study in a geriatric rehabilitation care facility | Bacitracin 30,000 U three times daily plus streptomycin 1 g once daily orally for 15 days/follow up for 6 months | VRE negative in 3 (75%) of 4 patients at the end of therapy and at 6 months | Not mentioned |
Note. U, units; VRE, vancomycin-resistant enterococci; ahigh intraluminal concentrations attained with oral vancomycin administration greatly exceed the MICs of VRE; bQuantitative VRE stool cultures in the treated cohort revealed an initial 3.1 log10/g decrease, but there was an increase to pretreatment levels of 7.8 and 7.4 log10/g at 2–4 and 5–7 weeks post-treatment respectively; cFor placebo group, VRE negative in none of 20 patients in day 0, 2 (10%) of 20 patients in day 7, and 5 (25%) of 20 patients in day 14 post treatment.
Summary of gastrointestinal decolonization of vancomycin-resistant enterococci by probiotic therapy
| Ref | Country/year of publication/study setting | Decolonization regimens/study end point(if mentioned) | Results at study end point | Microbiology culture methods/presence of broth enrichment or not |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Australia/2007/double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial in nephrology patients |
| VRE negative in all 11 patients in treatment group at the end of therapy; 8 (73%) remained VRE negative 4 weeks post treatment; VRE negative in 1 (8%) of 12 control patient at the end of treatment | Enterococcosel agar (BD, Sparks, Md, USA) containing 6 μg vancomycin/no broth enrichment |
| [ | France/2010/double-blind randomized pilot study in adult |
| VRE negative in 3 (50%) of 6 patients in treatment group vs 2 (100%) of 2 patients in control group at the end of therapy | Not mentioned |
| [ | Poland/2011/randomized, single-blind, placebo-controlled study in children |
| VRE negative in 20 (63%) of 32 patients in treatment group vs 7 (24%) of 29 in control group (p = 0.002) | Selective medium (D-Coccosel agar, BioMe’rieux) and a chromogenic medium (ChromID, BioMe’rieux)/no broth enrichment |
Note: VRE, vancomycin-resistant enterococci.