Literature DB >> 28539477

Bacterial colonization and succession in a newly opened hospital.

Simon Lax1,2, Naseer Sangwan2,3, Daniel Smith4, Peter Larsen2, Kim M Handley1, Miles Richardson1, Kristina Guyton3, Monika Krezalek3, Benjamin D Shogan3, Jennifer Defazio3, Irma Flemming3, Baddr Shakhsheer3, Stephen Weber5, Emily Landon5, Sylvia Garcia-Houchins5, Jeffrey Siegel6,7, John Alverdy3, Rob Knight8,9, Brent Stephens10, Jack A Gilbert11,2,3.   

Abstract

The microorganisms that inhabit hospitals may influence patient recovery and outcome, although the complexity and diversity of these bacterial communities can confound our ability to focus on potential pathogens in isolation. To develop a community-level understanding of how microorganisms colonize and move through the hospital environment, we characterized the bacterial dynamics among hospital surfaces, patients, and staff over the course of 1 year as a new hospital became operational. The bacteria in patient rooms, particularly on bedrails, consistently resembled the skin microbiota of the patient occupying the room. Bacterial communities on patients and room surfaces became increasingly similar over the course of a patient's stay. Temporal correlations in community structure demonstrated that patients initially acquired room-associated taxa that predated their stay but that their own microbial signatures began to influence the room community structure over time. The α- and β-diversity of patient skin samples were only weakly or nonsignificantly associated with clinical factors such as chemotherapy, antibiotic usage, and surgical recovery, and no factor except for ambulatory status affected microbial similarity between the microbiotas of a patient and their room. Metagenomic analyses revealed that genes conferring antimicrobial resistance were consistently more abundant on room surfaces than on the skin of the patients inhabiting those rooms. In addition, persistent unique genotypes of Staphylococcus and Propionibacterium were identified. Dynamic Bayesian network analysis suggested that hospital staff were more likely to be a source of bacteria on the skin of patients than the reverse but that there were no universal patterns of transmission across patient rooms.
Copyright © 2017, American Association for the Advancement of Science.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28539477      PMCID: PMC5706123          DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aah6500

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Transl Med        ISSN: 1946-6234            Impact factor:   17.956


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