Frontiers in Public Health (Oct 2024)

Handwashing sinks as reservoirs of carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii in the intensive care unit: a prospective multicenter study

  • Li Wei,
  • Li Wei,
  • Yu Feng,
  • Ji Lin,
  • Xia Kang,
  • Hongdi Zhuang,
  • Hongxia Wen,
  • Hongxia Wen,
  • Shasha Ran,
  • Lan Zheng,
  • Yujing Zhang,
  • Qian Xiang,
  • Yan Liu,
  • Xueqin Wu,
  • Xiaofei Duan,
  • Wensheng Zhang,
  • Qu Li,
  • Hua Guo,
  • Chuanmin Tao,
  • Fu Qiao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1468521
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

IntroductionThe extent to which sinks are contaminated by carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAB) in intensive care units (ICUs) and the association between these contaminated sinks and hospital-acquired CRAB infections during the non-cluster period remains largely unknown. Here, we performed a prospective multicenter study in 16 ICUs at 11 tertiary hospitals in Chengdu, China.MethodsWe sampled sinks, collected CRAB clinical isolates, and conducted whole-genome sequencing and analysis.ResultsA total of 789 swabs were collected from 158 sinks, and 16 CRAB isolates were recovered from 16 sinks, resulting in a contamination rate of 10.16%. Twenty-seven clinical isolates were collected during the study period. The majority (97.67%, 42/43) of the CRAB isolates belonged to ST2, and 36 (83.72%) of them had both blaOXA-23 and blaOXA-66. The 43 strains belonged to 12 clones. One certain clone caused multiple contaminations of seven sinks in one GICU. Two clones of ST2 blaOXA-23 and blaOXA-66-carrying sink strains were likely the sources of the two clusters in the two GICUs, respectively. Five ST2 blaOXA-23-carrying isolates were found to be common clones but were recovered from two hospitals.ConclusionThe contamination rate of CRAB in handwashing sinks is high in some local ICUs, and the contaminated sinks can serve as environmental reservoirs for CRAB clusters.

Keywords