Emerging Infectious Diseases (Dec 2002)

Use of Binary Cumulative Sums and Moving Averages in Nosocomial Infection Cluster Detection

  • Samuel M. Brown,
  • James C. Benneyan,
  • Daniel A. Theobald,
  • Kenneth Sands,
  • Matthew T. Hahn,
  • Gail A. Potter-Bynoe,
  • John M. Stelling,
  • Thomas F. O'Brien,
  • Donald A. Goldmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid0812.010514
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 12
pp. 1426 – 1432

Abstract

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Clusters of nosocomial infection often occur undetected, at substantial cost to the medical system and individual patients. We evaluated binary cumulative sum (CUSUM) and moving average (MA) control charts for automated detection of nosocomial clusters. We selected two outbreaks with genotyped strains and used resistance as inputs to the control charts. We identified design parameters for the CUSUM and MA (window size, k, α, β, p0, p1) that detected both outbreaks, then calculated an associated positive predictive value (PPV) and time until detection (TUD) for sensitive charts. For CUSUM, optimal performance (high PPV, low TUD, fully sensitive) was for 0.1 <α ≤0.25 and 0.2 <β <0.25, with p0 = 0.05, with a mean TUD of 20 (range 8–43) isolates. Mean PPV was 96.5% (relaxed criteria) to 82.6% (strict criteria). MAs had a mean PPV of 88.5% (relaxed criteria) to 46.1% (strict criteria). CUSUM and MA may be useful techniques for automated surveillance of resistant infections.

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