| Literature DB >> 33968793 |
Hsin-Yu Chen1, Shio-Shin Jean2,3, Yu-Lin Lee4, Min-Chi Lu5,6, Wen-Chien Ko7,8, Po-Yu Liu1,9,10, Po-Ren Hsueh11,12.
Abstract
The emergence of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) has become a major public health concern. Moreover, its colonization among residents of long-term care facilities (LTCFs) is associated with subsequent infections and mortality. To further explore the various aspects concerning CRE in LTCFs, we conducted a literature review on CRE colonization and/or infections in long-term care facilities. The prevalence and incidence of CRE acquisition among residents of LTCFs, especially in California, central Italy, Spain, Japan, and Taiwan, were determined. There was a significant predominance of CRE in LTCFs, especially in high-acuity LTCFs with mechanical ventilation, and thus may serve as outbreak centers. The prevalence rate of CRE in LTCFs was significantly higher than that in acute care settings and the community, which indicated that LTCFs are a vital reservoir for CRE. The detailed species and genomic analyses of CRE among LTCFs reported that Klebsiella pneumoniae is the primary species in the LTCFs in the United States, Spain, and Taiwan. KPC-2-containing K. pneumoniae strains with sequence type 258 is the most common sequence type of KPC-producing K. pneumoniae in the LTCFs in the United States. IMP-11- and IMP-6-producing CRE were commonly reported among LTCFs in Japan. OXA-48 was the predominant carbapenemase among LTCFs in Spain. Multiple risk factors associated with the increased risk for CRE acquisition in LTCFs were found, such as comorbidities, immunosuppressive status, dependent functional status, usage of gastrointestinal devices or indwelling catheters, mechanical ventilation, prior antibiotic exposures, and previous culture reports. A high CRE acquisition rate and prolonged CRE carriage duration after colonization were found among residents in LTCFs. Moreover, the patients from LTCFs who were colonized or infected with CRE had poor clinical outcomes, with a mortality rate of up to 75% in infected patients. Infection prevention and control measures to reduce CRE in LTCFs is important, and could possibly be controlled via active surveillance, contact precautions, cohort staffing, daily chlorhexidine bathing, healthcare-worker education, and hand-hygiene adherence.Entities:
Keywords: Enterobacteriaceae; carbapenemases; long-term care facilities; metallo-beta-lactamase; oxacillinase
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33968793 PMCID: PMC8102866 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.601968
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Studies of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales colonization in long-term care facilities in the United States.
| Reference | Study type | Sites | Study period | Study populations | Specimen sources | Sample size | Prevalence/incidence | LTCF percentage | Molecular studies | Risk factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Point prevalence study | New Jersey, Pennsylvania | 2008/01/15 | 63 LTCFs | Urine culture | 1,805 isolates | 6% CR-KP | 1,653 isolates from 44 SNF | NA | NA |
|
| Point Prevalence study | Chicago | 2010/07-2011/06 | 24 ACHs | rectal, inguinal swab, or urine | 391 patients | 30.4% (119 of 391) of LTACHs with KPC-producing Enterobacterales, compared to | All LTACHs had KPC, prevalence range, 10%–54%) | NA | LTACH facility type, mechanical ventilation, and length of stay |
|
| Point Prevalence study | Maryland | 2010/07-2010/08 | 30 (67%) ACHs and 10 (83%) LTCFs | peri-anal and sputum | 390 patients, total 358 samples | 6% of patients (ACH/LTCF) with KPC-producing Enterobacterales. | 55% (n=11) in LTCF | 15 | Mechanically ventilated |
|
| Point Prevalence study | USA | 2014/01-2015/03 | 3,470 patients across 64 LTACs | Blood, respiratory, urine | 3,846 unique quarterly | 24.6% CRKP | NA | NA | Geographic variation |
|
| retrospective Point Prevalence study | New York | chart review | a single center–affiliated LTCF | rectal swab | 301 residents (80-bed ventilator unit) | 18.9% asymptomatic rectal CRE colonization (n=57 patients 61 isolates) | CR-KP | CR-KP (n=46) | Recent CDI |
|
| Retrospective point prevalence study | Southern California | 2015/06 - 2015/08 | 605 residents in 3 NHs | axilla/groin swabs | 1,800 swabs from 605 residents | 1% CRE | NA | NA | history of MDRO, care needs, incontinence, and catheters. |
|
| Retrospective prevalence study | Washington, District of Columbia | 2016/01/11-2016/04/14 | 8 ACHs, | perianal swab | 1,022 completed tests | 5.2% CRE (n=53, 95% CI, 3.9%–6.8%) | ACH 5.0% | 4.3%(n=44) KPC | NA |
|
| Retrospective point prevalence study | Southern California | 2016/09-2017/03 | 18 NHs and 3 LTACHs [SHIELD Orange County Project] | bilateral axilla/groin and peri-rectal swabs | 50 adults | 67% (n=701) MDROs | NA | NA | Gastrointestinal device |
|
| Hospital admission | Chicago | NA | Hospitalized adults from 4 hospitals with an early KPC epidemic. | Rectal swab | 180 patients from LTCF | 8.3% (n=15) of LTCF had KPC-producing Enterobacterales colonization | 0 (0%) of the community patients (P<.001). | NA | LTCF subtype |
|
| Hospital admission | Northeastern Ohio | 2011/12/24 | Hospitalized patients from LTCF and community (28%) | NA | 251 patients admitted to | CRKP infection in 45% patients | NA | 88 CRKP isolates belong to ST258 | NA |
|
| Hospital admission | Providence, Rhode Island | 2012/07-2012/09 | hospital admission from NHs | Fecal carriage (rectal swab PCR) | 404 patients with 500 hospital admissions | 4.6% CPE fecal carriage rate (n=23), | NA | 2 KPC producing | Gastrostomy (p=0.04) |
|
| Incidence surveillance | Michigan | 2012/09/01-2013/02/28 | 17 ACHs | NA | 102 cases over 957220 patient days | 1.07 cases per 10,000 patient days | 5% hospital onset, 65% community onset (75% had health care exposure within 90d) | 89 cases | surgery in 90 days, recent infection/colonization with a multidrug-resistant organism, recent exposures to antimicrobials |
|
| Incidence surveillance | Detroit | 2011/01/01-2012/07/31 | A 77-bed LTAC in Detroit | NA | 30 patients with CRE | Incidence | 23 (77%) patients had CRE following LTAC admission | 8 CRE isolates had | |
|
| point incident survey | 8-county Atlanta metropolitan area | 2016 | Georgia Emerging Infections Program (EIP), Facility-specific Connectivity Using Medicare Data | NA | NA | 283 incident CRE cases | 50% in ACH (n=141), 40% in SNFs | CRE infections originate from almost all ACHs and half of SNFs. | Medicare patient transfers strongly correlated with CRE case-transfer data in ACHs (r=0.75; P<0.01) and LTACHs (r=0.77; P=0.03), but not in SNFs (r=0.02; P=0.85). |
|
| Incidence | NA | 2010/06/01-2011/05/31 | ACH, LTAC, NH | NA | 814 reports | ACH (57%, n=387), LTAC (34%, n=231), SNH (8%, n=57) | pooled mean incidence rate in ACHs and LTACs was 0.46 per 1000 patient-days | ||
|
| Outbreak surveillance | South Florida | 2008/03/21 | 1 LTAC | NA | 10 KPC-KP in 241 KP isolates (4.1%) | NA | 7 KPC-KP from a LTAC | 3 KPC-KP belong to ST258 | NA |
|
| Outbreak surveillance | North Carolina (USA) | 2016/10/22-2017/11/30 | 3 LTCF during outbreak | rectal swab | 83 isolates | 7 CROs (8.4%), | 6 in LTCF | 4 IMP | |
ACHs, acute care hospitals; ALF, assisted living facility; CDI, Clostridium difficile Infection; CRO, carbapenem-resistant organisms; CPE, carbapenemase producing Enterobacterales; CRE, carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae; CRKP, carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae; ICU, intensive care units; KP, Klebsiella pneumoniae; KPC, Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase; LTACs, long-term acute care hospitals; LTCFs, long-term care facilities; MDROs, Multidrug-Resistant Organisms; NA, not available, NDM, New Delhi metallo-β-lactamase; NHs, nursing homes; SNF, Skilled nursing facility.
Studies carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales colonization in long-term care facilities in the Europe.
| Authors | Study type | Sites | Study period | Study populations | Specimen sources | Sample size | Prevalence/incidence | LTCF percentage | Molecular studies | Risk factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Point prevalence study | Israel | NA | 1,144 patients in | Rectal swab | CRKP carriage in 1,044 patients | 12% CRKP (1004/1144) | NA | NA | Prolonged length of stay, sharing a room with known carrier, antibiotic use in prior 3 months, prior culture grew CRKP |
|
| Point prevalence study | Switzerland | 2007/01-2017/10 | NH | Urogenital, skin, other | 16,804 samples from 9,940 residents | 0.3% CRE | NA | NA | Non-urogenital isolates, geographic |
|
| Point prevalence study | Belgium | 2015/06 | 51 randomly selected residents per NH | Rectal swab | 1,447 residents from 29 NHs | CRE carriage in | NA | NA | NA |
|
| Point prevalence study | Netherlands | 2014/11 | 12 LTCFs | Rectal swab | 385 residents from 12 LTCFs | CRE carriage in only 1 resident | MDR-GNB carriage rate 18.2% (range 0-47%) | NA | NA |
|
| Point prevalence study | North Lebanon | 2013/12-2014/04 | 2 NHs | Fecal swab | 178 isolates from 68 NH residents | 1.7% CRE | NA | 1.7% co-producers of OXA-48 and ESBL | Recent antibiotic use |
|
| Hospital admission | Spain | 2013/02/01-2013/05/01 | in 34 hospitals | NA | NA | 379 isolates from | Healthcare associated in 91 cases (37%), of which 42% NH residents | Of 35 NH cases | NA |
|
| Outbreak surveillance | Western France | 2014/05-2017/07 | 10 isolates from 3 intra-NH outbreak | Urine | NA | 10 CRE in 3 outbreaks | NA | 10/10 OXA-48 | Antibiotic consumption, |
CRKP, carbapenem resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae; PACF, post-acute-care facilities; CPE, carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales; CRE, carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales; LTCFs, long-term care facilities; MDR-GNB, multidrug-resistant micro-organisms; NA, not available; NHs, nursing homes.
Studies of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales colonization in long-term care facilities in the Asia.
| Authors | Study type | Sites | Study period | Study populations | Specimen sources | Sample size | Prevalence/incidence | LTCF percentage | Molecular studies | Risk factors | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Point prevalence study | Hiroshima (Japan) | 2017/02 | Residents in a LTCF | Oropharyngeal swab | 98 residents in a LTCF | 13% CRE | NA | 1 MDR- | NA | |
|
| Hospital admission | Northern Osaka (Japan) | 2015/12 | Admission to 43 hospitals | stool | 140 patients from 43 hospital | 19.3% CRE | One hospital had 200 long-term care beds | IMP-6 | Longer hospital stay, lower Norton scales | |
|
| Point prevalence study | Taiwan | 2015/01 | Residents in 6 LTCFs | Rectal swab | 313 residents in 6 LTCFs | 22.7% CRE | NA | NA | Functional status, dementia | |
|
| Point prevalence study | Hong-Kong | 2015/09 | 20 RCHE | Nasal, axillary, rectal swab or stool | 1,028 residents | 0 in 373 stool and 654 rectal swab for CRE screening | NA | NA | NA | |
|
| Outbreak surveillance | Taiwan | 2013/05 | 1 LTCF | Case 1 abscess Case 2 blood | 4 isolates from 3 patients in a LTCF | NA | NA | 4/4 | NA | |
CRE, carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales; IMP, imipenemase; LTCFs, long-term care facilities; NA, not available; RCHE, residential care homes for the elderly.
Risk factors for CRE acquisition in LTCFs.
| Types of factors | Odds ratio or relative risks documented in studies |
|---|---|
|
| Fecal incontinence (OR 5.78) ( |
|
| Usage of gastrointestinal devices (OR 19.7) ( |
|
| Prior antibiotic exposures (OR 3.89) ( |
CVC, central venous catheter; CRKP, carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae; LTAC, long-term acute care hospitals; OR, odds ratio.
Figure 1The global distribution of various carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae related to long-term care facilities.