| Literature DB >> 27307987 |
Bernhard Jahn1, Trudy M Wassenaar2, Annemarie Stroh1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Guidelines for the control of hospital-acquired MRSA include decolonization measures to end MRSA carrier status in colonized and infected patients. Successful decolonization typically requires up to 22 days of treatment, which is longer than the average hospital length of stay (LOS). Incomplete decolonization is therefore common, with long-term MRSA carriage as a consequence. To overcome this, we developed an integrated MRSA Management (IMM) by extending MRSA decolonization to the outpatient and domestic setting. The protocol makes use of polyhexanide-based products, in view of reported qac-mediated resistance to chlorhexidine in S. aureus and MRSA.Entities:
Keywords: Decolonization; Domestic; Hospital; LOS; Length of stay; Long-term care; MRSA; Methicillin resistance; Polyhexanide
Year: 2016 PMID: 27307987 PMCID: PMC4908775 DOI: 10.1186/s13756-016-0124-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Resist Infect Control ISSN: 2047-2994 Impact factor: 4.887
Fig. 1Schematic of the study. In panel (a), the procedure is shown, with arrows representing actions and boxes representing an MRSA status. The asterisks indicate that the decolonization treatment could be repeated with a maximum of 3 treatments in total. Depending on the number of required decolonization treatments (1 to 3) the procedure was completed in 11 to 25 days. Panel (b) shows the inpatient control group and the IMM group. The treatment regime was the same for both, though the location of the patients differed
Polyhexanide-based antiseptics used for decolonization
| Decolonization site | Polyhexanide concentration | Other ingredients | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ProntOral® | throat, mouth wash | 0.15 % | Aroma, sodium cyclamate, surfactants, excipients |
| Prontoderm® Nasal gel | nose | 0.1 % | Glycerine, hydroxyethylcellulose, excipients |
| Prontosan® Solution | wound irrigation | 0.1 % | Betaine surfactant |
| Prontoderm® Solution/Foam | whole-body/hair washing, external auditory canal (Solution only) | 0.11 % | Surfactants, excipients |
Characteristics of the study participants
| A. Demographic characteristicsa | Interventional IMM-population | Inpatient control group | |
| ( | ( | ||
| Age | years | years | |
| Mean | 68 | 71 | |
| Standard deviation | ±15 | ±13 | |
| Range | 27-96 | 20-95 | |
| Age category |
|
| |
| <65 years | 35 (35 %) | 56 (28 %) | |
| >65 years | 64 (65 %) | 145 (72 %) | |
| Gender |
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| Male | 60 (61 %) | 122 (61 %) | |
| Female | 39 (39 %) | 79 (39 %) | |
| Skin alterations |
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| With skin alterations | 60 (61 %) | 136 (68 %) | |
| Without skin alterations | 39 (39 %) | 65 (32 %) | |
| B. Study entry description | |||
| Patients with entry in the study from |
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| |
| Hospital | 62 (63 %) | Hospital inpatient, by default | |
| Long-term care | 12 (12 %) | ||
| Patient’s home | 25 (25 %) | ||
| Discharge location (IMM only) | |||
| Hospital | 0 | not applicable | |
| Long-term care | 22 (22 %) | ||
| Patient’s home | 77 (78 %) | ||
| Patients not completing | 6 (6 %) | 0 | |
| Protocol violations | 9 (9 %) | 0 | |
| Per protocol Set (PPS) |
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| |
at-test (age): p > 0.05. Chi-square test (gender, skin alterations): p > 0.05
bPPS inpatient control group: LOS of 22 ± 3 decolonization days or three negative MRSA-swabs
Obtained MRSA-status at the end of the study, FAS and PPS results
| A. Full Analysis Set (FAS) of 300 subjects | |||||||
| Final MRSA-status n (%) | Interventional IMM-population | Inpatient control group | Chi-square test for final MRSA-status | ||||
| ( | ( | ||||||
| W/o skin alterations | With skin alterations | Total | W/o skin alterations | With skin alterations | Total | IMM-population vs. inpatient control group | |
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| MRSA-free (3 neg. swabs series) | 27 | 19 | 46 | 8 | 16 | 24 | For all patients: |
| (69 %) | (32 %) | (47 %) | (12 %) | (12 %) | (12 %) | ||
| Two negative swabs series | 0 | 1 | 1 | 8 | 11 | 19 | For patients without skin alterations: |
| (2 %) | (1 %) | (12 %) | (8 %) | (9 %) | |||
| One negative swab series | 0 | 0 | 0 | 15 | 25 | 40 | |
| (23 %) | (18 %) | (20 %) | |||||
| Remainder MRSA-positive | 12 | 40 | 52 | 34 | 84 | 118 | For patients with skin alterations: |
| (31 %) | (67 %) | (52 %) | (53 %) | (62 %) | (59 %) | ||
| Total MRSA-positve | 12 | 41 | 53 | 57 | 120 | 177 | |
| (31 %) | (69 %) | (53 %) | (88 %) | (88 %) | (88 %) | ||
| Chi-square test for final MRSA-status | Patients with and without skin alterations: | Patients with and without skin alterations: | |||||
| B. Per Protocol Set (PPS) of 138 subjects with completed decolonization + follow-up | |||||||
| Final MRSA-status n (%) | Interventional IMM-population | Inpatient control group | Chi-square test for final MRSA-status | ||||
| ( | ( | ||||||
| W/o skin alterations | With skin alterations | Total | W/o skin alterations | With skin alterations | Total | IMM-population vs. inpatient control group | |
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| MRSA-free (3 neg. swabs series) | 27 | 19 | 46 | 7 | 16 | 23 | For all patients: |
| (75 %) | (40 %) | (55 %) | (50 %) | (40 %) | (43 %) | ||
| Two negative swabs series | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 6 | 11 | For patients without skin alterations: |
| (36 %) | (15 %) | (20 %) | |||||
| One negative swab series | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 7 | 7 | |
| (18 %) | (13 %) | ||||||
| Remainder MRSA-positive | 9 | 29 | 38 | 2 | 11 | 13 | For patients with skin alterations: |
| (25 %) | (60 %) | (45 %) | (14 %) | (27 %) | (24 %) | ||
| Total MRSA-positve | 9 | 29 | 38 | 7 | 24 | 31 | |
| (25 %) | (60 %) | (45 %) | (50 %) | (60 %) | (57 %) | ||
| Chi-square test for final MRSA-status | Patients with and without skin alterations: | Patients with and without skin alterations: | |||||
Fig. 2Analysis of patient demography, hospitalization and body-site specific data. The percentage of patients turned MRSA-negative is shown in grey, absolute numbers are shown below the column, e.g., 14 turned negative out of 26 patients. Significance is indicated as *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01 and ***p < 0.001
Fig. 3Effect of skin alterations on success rate of decolonization. Panel (a) shows the effect of absence or presence of skin alterations for PPS patients (intervention group and inpatient control group combined) upon admission. Panel (b) shows the effect of the MRSA-status of the skin alterations at baseline. (Significance **p < 0.01 and ***p < 0.001)