Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/9440
Title: Increasing trend of healthcare-associated infections due to vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VRE-fm) paralleling escalating community-acquired VRE-fm infections in a medical center implementing strict contact precautions: An epidemiologic and pathogenic genotype analysis and its implications
Authors: Tang, Ya-Fen
Lin, Yin-Shiou
Su, Li-Hsiang
Liu, Jien-Wei
Keywords: Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus
Healthcareassociated infections
Increasing trends
Multilocus sequence typing (MLST)
Pulse-field gel electrophoresis typing
Issue Date: Oct-2023
Publisher: Elsevier Taiwan LLC
Citation: Original Article
Abstract: Abstract Objective: To clarify whether there were clandestine intra-hospital spreads of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VRE-fm) isolates that led to specific strain of VRE lingering in the hospital and/or developing outbreaks that rendered a progressively increasing trend of healthcare-associated infections due to VRE-fm (VRE-fm-HAIs). Setting: Despite implementing strict contact precautions for hospitalized patients with VRE-fminfection/colonization, number of VRE-fm-HAIs in a medical centre in southern Taiwan were escalating in 2009e2019, paralleling an increasing trend of community-acquired VRE-fm- infections. Methods: We analyzed epidemiologic data and genotypes of non-duplicate VRE-fm isolates each grown from a normally sterile site of 89 patients between December 2016 and October 2018; multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and pulse-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) typing were performed. Results: Totally 13 sequence types (STs) were found, and the 3 leading STs were ST17 (44%), ST78 (37%), and ST18 (6%); 66 pulsotypes were generated by PFGE. Four VRE-fm isolates grouped as ST17/pulsotype S, 2 as ST17/pulsotype AS, 2 as ST17/pulsotype AU, and 3 as ST78/pulsotype V grew from clinical specimens sampled less than one week apart from patients staying at different wards/departments and/or on different floors of the hospital. Conclusions: Despite possible small transitory clusters of intra-hospital VRE-fm spreads, there was no specific VRE-fm strain lingering in the hospital leading to increasing trend of VRE-fm-HAIs during the study period. Strict contact precautions were able to curb intra-hospital VRE-fm spreads, but unable to curb the increasing trend of VRE-fm-HAIs with the backdrop of progressively increasing VRE-fm-infections/colorizations in the community.
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/9440
Appears in Collections:VOL 56 NO 5 2023

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