| Literature DB >> 33270611 |
Stephen Perez, Gabriel K Innes, Maroya Spalding Walters, Jason Mehr, Jessica Arias, Rebecca Greeley, Debra Chew.
Abstract
Carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAB), an opportunistic pathogen primarily associated with hospital-acquired infections, is an urgent public health threat (1). In health care facilities, CRAB readily contaminates the patient care environment and health care providers' hands, survives for extended periods on dry surfaces, and can be spread by asymptomatically colonized persons; these factors make CRAB outbreaks in acute care hospitals difficult to control (2,3). On May 28, 2020, a New Jersey hospital (hospital A) reported a cluster of CRAB infections during a surge in patients hospitalized with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Hospital A and the New Jersey Department of Health (NJDOH) conducted an investigation, and identified 34 patients with hospital-acquired multidrug-resistant CRAB infection or colonization during February-July 2020, including 21 (62%) who were admitted to two intensive care units (ICUs) dedicated to caring for COVID-19 patients. In late March, increasing COVID-19-related hospitalizations led to shortages in personnel, personal protective equipment (PPE), and medical equipment, resulting in changes to conventional infection prevention and control (IPC) practices. In late May, hospital A resumed normal operations, including standard IPC measures, as COVID-19 hospitalizations decreased, lessening the impact of personnel and supply chain shortages on hospital functions. CRAB cases subsequently returned to a pre-COVID-19 baseline of none to two cases monthly. The occurrence of this cluster underscores the potential for multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs) to spread during events when standard hospital practices might be disrupted; conventional IPC strategies should be reinstated as soon as capacity and resources allow.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33270611 PMCID: PMC7714028 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6948e1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
FIGURENumber of admitted patients with COVID-19 (N = 846) and hospital-acquired carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAB)* (N = 34), by month — hospital A, New Jersey, February–July 2020
Abbreviation: COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019.
* CRAB infection or colonization.
Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients with carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAB) (N = 34) — hospital A, New Jersey, February–July 2020
| Characteristics of patients with CRAB | No. (%) of patients |
|---|---|
|
| 55 (48–64) |
|
| |
| Male | 24 (71) |
| Female | 10 (29) |
|
| |
| Home | 28 (82) |
| Skilled nursing facility | 5 (15) |
| Long-term acute care hospital | 1 (3) |
|
| |
| Intensive care unit | 25 (73) |
| Medical-surgical unit | 5 (15) |
| Progressive care or step-down unit | 4 (12) |
|
| |
| Respiratory (sputum, tracheal aspirate, or bronchial) | 17 (50) |
| Axilla, groin, or rectal | 6 (18) |
| Blood | 5 (15) |
| Wound, bone, or other tissue | 4 (12) |
| Urine | 2 (5) |
|
| |
| Positive | 17 (50) |
| Negative | 17 (50) |
|
| |
| Ventilator-associated pneumonia | 10 (29) |
| Ventilator-associated pneumonia with bacteremia | 4 (12) |
| Bacteremia | 3 (9) |
| Bone or soft tissue infection | 3 (9) |
| Colonization | 14 (41) |
|
| |
| Yes | 25 (74) |
| No | 7 (21) |
|
| |
| Yes | 8 (24) |
| No | 26 (76) |
|
| |
| Yes | 28 (82) |
| No | 6 (18) |
|
| |
| Discharged/Transferred | 23 (68) |
| Deceased | 10 (29) |
| Remains hospitalized | 1 (3) |
Abbreviation: IQR = interquartile range