Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control (Apr 2022)

Patients exposed to vancomycin-resistant enterococci during in-hospital outbreaks in a low endemic setting: a proposal for risk-based screening

  • Andrea C. Büchler,
  • Silvio Ragozzino,
  • Melanie Wicki,
  • Violeta Spaniol,
  • Sammy Jäger,
  • Helena M. B. Seth-Smith,
  • Daniel Goldenberger,
  • Vladimira Hinic,
  • Adrian Egli,
  • Reno Frei,
  • Andreas F. Widmer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13756-022-01089-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background The optimal extent of screening of contact patients (CoPat) after exposure to patients infected or colonized with vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) remains controversial. Methods We retrospectively developed a new risk stratification for screening patients exposed to VRE, based on data from three outbreaks—two with Enterococcus faecium vanB and one with Enterococcus faecium vanA involving 1096 CoPat—in a low endemic setting. We classified them into four risk groups: three on environmental exposure, one by healthcare exposure: high (sharing the same room/bathroom with a VRE-colonized patient), medium (hospitalization in the same room after a VRE-colonized patient’s discharge until terminal disinfection including ultraviolet C (UVc)-disinfection), low (hospitalized in the same room within three weeks before the VRE-colonized patient), and “staff” (screening of patients having the same medical care team). Results VRE-transmission occurred in 7.9% in the high-risk group compared to 0.6% and 0% in the medium and low risk groups. There was a significant trend to higher rates of transmission by risk level of exposure (p < 0.001). In the “staff” group, VRE transmission rate was 2.3%. Conclusion Based on this stratification, we recommend to focus screening of exposed CoPat on the high-risk and “staff” group, saving resources and costs, but larger studies will allow to further improve the yield of VRE screening in the outbreak setting.

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