Infection Prevention in Practice (Jun 2023)

Hospital-acquired E. coli bacteraemia at a large UK NHS Trust. A return towards baseline following implementation of a 5-year quality improvement programme

  • Steven Gopaul,
  • Catherine Dominic,
  • Juliana Tinhuna,
  • James Green,
  • Eleanor Watkins,
  • Mark Melzer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 2
p. 100280

Abstract

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Summary: Introduction: Until recently, healthcare-associated E. coli bacteraemia was a neglected area of infection prevention and control (IPC), despite a 30-day mortality of 15–20%. Recently, the UK Department of Health (DH) introduced a target to reduce hospital-acquired E. coli bacteraemias by 50% over a five-year period. Following implementation of multifaceted and multidisciplinary interventions, the aim of this study was to determine its impact on achieving this target. Methods: From April 2017 to March 2022, consecutive hospital-acquired E. coli bacteraemic inpatients within Barts Health NHS Trust were prospectively studied. Using quality improvement methodology, and implementing the plan, do, study, act (PDSA) cycle at each stage, antibiotic prophylaxis for high-risk procedures were modified and ‘good practice’ interventions around medical devices introduced. Characteristics of bacteraemic patients were analysed and trends in bacteraemic episodes recorded. Statistical analysis was undertaken in Stata SE (version 16). Results: There were 770 patients and 797 episodes of hospital-acquired E. coli bacteraemias. Following a baseline of 134 episodes in 2017-18, this peaked at 194 in 2019-20 before dropping to 157 in 2020-21 and 159 in 2021-22. Most hospital-acquired E. coli bacteraemias occurred in those aged > 50, 551 (69.1%), with the highest proportion occurring in those age > 70, 292 (36.6%). Hospital-acquired E. coli bacteraemia occurred more commonly between October to December.Most episodes occurred in either medicine or care of the elderly patients, 345 (43.3%), specialist surgery, 141 (17.7%), haematology/oncology, 127 (15.9%) and patients requiring critical care, 108 (13.6%). The urinary tract, 336 (42.2%), both catheter and non-catheter associated, was the commonest sites of infection. 175 (22.0%) of E. coli bacteraemic isolates were extended spectrum beta lactamase (ESB) producing. Co-amoxiclav resistance was 315 (39.5%), ciprofloxacin resistance 246 (30.9%) and gentamicin resistance 123 (15.4%). At 7 days, 77 patients (9.7%; 95% CI 7.4–12.2%) died and by 30 days this had risen to 129 (16.2%; 95% CI 13.7–19.9%). Conclusion: Despite implementation of quality improvement (QI) interventions, it was not possible to achieve a 50% reduction from baseline although an 18% reduction was achieved from 2019-20 onwards. Our work highlights the importance of antimicrobial prophylaxis and medical device ‘good practice’. Over time, these interventions, if properly implemented, could further reduce healthcare-associated E. coli bacteraemic infection.

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