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Collaboration for containment: Detection of OXA-23–like carbapenamase-producing Acinetobacter baumannii in Colorado

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2018

Heather L. Young*
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine, Denver Health Medical Center and University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, Colorado
Caroline Croyle
Affiliation:
Department of Patient Safety and Quality, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, Colorado
Sarah J. Janelle
Affiliation:
Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, Denver, Colorado
Bryan C. Knepper
Affiliation:
Department of Patient Safety and Quality, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, Colorado
Jennifer Kurtz
Affiliation:
Department of Patient Safety and Quality, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, Colorado
Amber Miller
Affiliation:
Department of Planning and Construction, University of Colorado Health, Aurora, Colorado
Sara M. Reese
Affiliation:
Department of Quality. Swedish Medical Center, Denver, Colorado
Kyle Schutz
Affiliation:
Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, Denver, Colorado
Wendy M. Bamberg
Affiliation:
Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, Denver, Colorado
*
Author for correspondence: Heather Young MD, Denver Health Medical Center, 601 Broadway, MC 4000, Denver CO 80204. E-mail: Heather.Young2@dhha.org
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Abstract

Type
Letter to the Editor
Copyright
© 2018 by The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America. All rights reserved 

To the Editor—Multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (MDR-AB) is an aggressive pathogen often transmitted in healthcare facilities. Critically ill patients are at highest risk, particularly those with recent surgery, prolonged ventilation, and exposure to broad spectrum antibiotics.Reference Munoz-Price and Weinstein 1 Containment of MDR-AB requires early identification and multifaceted interventions.

MDR-AB strains that are resistant to carbapenems present additional containment issues because plasmid-mediated carbapenemase production is a common resistance mechanism.Reference Walsh 2 Given its importance as an emerging antimicrobial-resistant pathogen, many public health departments, including the Denver metropolitan region in Colorado, require carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAB) to be reported.

Between December 2017 and February 2018, Denver Health Medical Center (DHMC) detected 2 inpatients with carbapenemase-producing CRAB isolates in urine. Prior to these cases, no previous CRAB isolates in Colorado had been characterized as carbapenemase-producing organisms. DHMC and the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) collaborated to determine epidemiologic and molecular relatedness of the isolates, as well as to investigate healthcare infection control measures.

DHMC is a 555-bed safety net teaching hospital and level 1 trauma center located in Denver, Colorado. DHMC previously reported an MDR-AB outbreak between 2004 and 2005,Reference Young, Sabel and Price 3 and these MDR-AB isolates retained carbapenem susceptibility. Regionally, CRAB is unusual in the Denver metropolitan region, with 2–13 cases reported from sterile body sites and urine per year since 2013.

The CDPHE epidemiologists and DHMC infection preventionists performed surveillance for additional cases that met the case definition. CRAB isolates were defined as those that had a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) to at least 1 carbapenem in the intermediate or resistant range. Investigators reviewed medical records for common hospital locations, medical equipment, procedures, and staff members. Infection preventionists observed practices among shared staff members. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) was performed at the CDPHE laboratory, while antimicrobial susceptibility and carbapenemase testing was performed at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The epidemiologic investigation revealed several similarities. Patient 1 was a 59-year-old male with diabetes mellitus and spina bifida, while patient 2 was a 23-year-old male with lymphangiomatosis and resulting T6 paraplegia. Both patients had neurogenic bladders managed by suprapubic catheters, stage 4 decubitus ulcers, recent surgery, and extensive antibiotic exposure. Neither had recently traveled outside of Colorado nor received a carbapenem in the prior 6 months. CRAB was detected from urine culture at the time of hospital admission in both patients and was considered to represent asymptomatic bacteriuria.

One month before identification of the first CRAB, the patients overlapped at DHMC for 8 days on different units. Potential epidemiologic links included radiology and wound care. Both patients had radiographs taken on the same day; one patient traveled to the radiology department, whereas the other had a portable radiograph. Observations of portable radiology technicians revealed consistent and adequate low-level disinfection of equipment and reliable hand hygiene. One wound-care nurse provided care to both patients on the same day. Observations of the wound-care team indicated opportunities to improve hand hygiene prior to donning and after doffing gloves; the use of single-use scissors on multiple patients; and inconsistent cleaning of a mobile device used to photograph open wounds. Discussion with the patients’ outpatient providers showed that their suprapubic and wound care supplies were obtained from different companies.

Molecular analyses of the 2 patients’ isolates were indistinguishable by PFGE using the restriction enzymes AscI and ApaI. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing revealed that both isolates were susceptible to colistin and resistant to all carbapenems tested. Both harbored OXA-23–like genes according to a Research Use Only assay performed at CDC.

While OXA-23-like enzymes are novel in Colorado, they were first identified in Scotland in 1985 and are the most common carbapenemase enzyme detected worldwide, accounting for 63% of nosocomial CRAB in Argentina, 42%–100% in Brazil, 98% in Colombia, and 55%–80% in Saudi Arabia.Reference Paton, Miles, Hood, Amyes, Miles and Amyes 4 , Reference Labarca, Salles, Seas and Guzman-Blanco 6 , Reference Yezli, Shibl and Memish 7 OXA-23–like enzymes are almost exclusively found in Acinetobacter baumannii and can be encoded by genes located on either a chromosome or plasmid.Reference Walsh 2 , Reference Evans and Amyes 5 OXA-23–like enzymes do not require the presence of other resistance mechanisms (eg, porin mutations or efflux pumps) to confer carbapenem resistance. However, when a bacterial strain also carries an efflux pump, the bacteria exhibit higher minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) to carbapenems as well as resistance to multiple antibiotics, complicating the detection of the gene variant through phenotypic surveillance.Reference Evans and Amyes 5

We suspect that the organisms were transmitted during the overlapping hospital admission, although we could not determine where the organism originated or the route of transmission. On the facility level, opportunities to improve hand hygiene and low-level disinfection were identified and addressed. The charts were flagged to indicate that the patients harbored an MDR organism and would require contact precautions upon arrival. Infection preventionists notified clinics when upcoming outpatient appointments were detected. The clinics scheduled these patients to be the last of the clinic session when possible to allow for a thorough environmental cleaning after the clinic visit.

On a regional level, CDPHE epidemiologists contacted other healthcare facilities where these patients frequently sought care and encouraged these facilities to also electronically flag medical records and to ensure effective infection control measures. While no further cases of CRAB have been identified to date at DHMC, 1 additional OXA-23–producing CRAB case, without epidemiologic links to the previous 2 patients, has been identified in Colorado since this cluster.

The emergence of previously undetected carbapenemases in Colorado is of great public health concern. Active collaboration and communication between public health and healthcare facilities is critical to halt transmission of novel regional pathogens.

Acknowledgments

None.

Financial support

No financial support was provided relevant to this article.

Conflicts of interest

All authors report no conflicts of interest relevant to this article.

References

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