Latest News

Hospital isolates C. difficile carriers and rates drop


 

AT ASM MICROBE 2017

NEW ORLEANS– A Montreal hospital grappling with high Clostridium difficile infections rates launched an intervention in October 2013 to screen patients at admission and detect asymptomatic carriers, and investigators found 4.8% of 7,599 people admitted through the ED over 15 months were carriers of C. difficile.

To protect Jewish General Hospital physicians, staff and other patients from potential transmission, these patients were placed in isolation. However, because they were fairly numerous – 1 in 20 admissions – and because infectious disease (ID) experts feared a substantial backlash, these patients were put in less restrictive isolation. They were permitted to share rooms as long as the dividing curtains remained drawn, for example. In addition, clinicians could skip wearing traditional isolation hats and gowns.

CDC/Jennifer Hulsey
“We have the same problem you have in your hospital. Trying to sell isolation to doctors and nurses is like trying to convince kids to eat their vegetables. It’s good for you, but no one wants to do it,” said Yves Longtin, MD, chair of the Infection Prevention and Control Unit at Jewish General Hospital, Montreal. “It was easier sell to everyone in the hospital if we did not require gowns.”

The ID team at the hospital considered the intervention a success. “It is estimated we prevented 64 cases over 15 months,” Dr. Longtin said during a packed session at the annual meeting of the American Society for Microbiology.

The hospital’s C. difficile rate dropped from 6.9 per 10,000 patient-days before the screening and isolation protocol to 3.0 per 10,000 during the intervention. The difference was statically significant (P less than .001).

“Compared to other hospitals in the province, we used to be in the middle of the pack [for C. difficile infection rates], and now we are the lowest,” Dr. Longtin said.

Asymptomatic carriers were detected using rectal sampling with sterile swab and polymerase chain reaction analysis. Testing was performed 7 days a week and analyzed once daily, with results generated within 24 hours and documented in the patient chart. Only patients admitted through the ED were screened, which prompted some questions from colleagues, Dr. Longtin said. However, he defends this approach because the 30% or so of patients admitted from the ED tend to spend more days on the ward. The risk of becoming colonized increases steadily with duration of hospitalization. This occurs despite isolating patients with C. difficile infection. Initial results of the study were published in JAMA Internal Medicine (2016 Jun 1;176[6]:796-804).

Risk to health care workers

C. difficile carriers are contagious, but not as much as people with C. difficile infection, Dr. Longtin said. In one study, the microorganism was present on the skin of 61% of symptomatic carriers versus 78% of those infected (Clin Infect Dis. 2007 Oct 15;45[8]:992-8). In addition, C. difficile present on patient skin can be transferred to health care worker hands, even up to 6 weeks after resolution of associated diarrhea (Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2016 Apr;37[4]:475-7).

Prior to the intervention, C. difficile prevention at Jewish General involved guidelines that “have not really changed in the last 20 years,” Dr. Longtin said. Contact precautions around infected patients, hand hygiene, environmental cleaning, and antibiotic stewardship were the main strategies.

“Despite all these measures, we were not completely blocking dissemination of C difficile in our hospital,” Dr. Longtin said. He added that soap and water are better than alcohol for C. difficile, “but honestly not very good. Even the best hand hygiene technique is poorly effective to remove C. difficile. On the other hand – get it? – gloves are very effective. We felt we had to combine hand washing with gloves.”

Hand hygiene compliance increased from 37% to 50% during the intervention, and Dr. Longtin expected further improvements over time.

Risk to other patients

“Transmission of C. difficile cannot only be explained by infected patients in a hospital, so likely carriers also play a role,” Dr. Longtin said.

Another set of investigators found that hospital patients exposed to a carrier of C. difficile had nearly twice the risk of acquiring the infection (odds ratio, 1.79) (Gastroenterology. 2017 Apr;152[5]:1031-41.e2).

“For every patient with C. difficile infection, it’s estimated there are 5-7 C. difficile carriers, so they are numerous as well,” he said.

The bigger picture

During the study period, the C. difficile infection trends did not significantly change on the city level, further supporting the effectiveness of the carrier screen-and-isolate strategy.

Long-term follow-up is ongoing, Dr. Longtin said. “We have more than 3 years of intervention. In the past year, our rate was 2.2 per 10,000 patient-days.”

Unanswered questions include the generalizability of the results “because we’re a very pro–infection control hospital,” he said. In addition, a formal cost-benefit analysis of this strategy would be worthwhile in the future.

Dr. Longtin is a consultant for AMG Medical and receives research support from Merck and BD Medical.

Recommended Reading

Eliminating tap water consumption may prevent M. abscessus outbreaks
MDedge Family Medicine
Sepsis survivors may have high risk for seizures
MDedge Family Medicine
Hospital infections top WHO’s list of priority pathogens
MDedge Family Medicine
Each added day of pediatric MRSA bacteremia upped complication risk 50%
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Registry study will follow 4,000 fecal transplant patients for 10 years
MDedge Family Medicine
Ribaxamase prevented C. difficile infections by protecting microbiome
MDedge Family Medicine
For vertebral osteomyelitis, early switch to oral antibiotics is feasible
MDedge Family Medicine
Monoclonal antibody holds promise for S. aureus pneumonia
MDedge Family Medicine
Burkholderia cepacia causes blood infection in older, sicker patients
MDedge Family Medicine
C. difficile travels on the soles of our shoes
MDedge Family Medicine