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Angela Wigmore, K. Suh, N. Bruce, G. Garber, C. Chambers, Liz Van Horne, V. Allen, C. Egan, K. Stockton, V. Roth Nosocomial Clostridium difficile Infection (CDI): Things Are Not Always As They Seem

Nosocomial Clostridium difficile Infection (CDI): Things ......•Things are not always as they seem. HA cases that appear to be linked were caused by different strains of Clostridium

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  • Angela Wigmore, K. Suh, N. Bruce, G. Garber, C. Chambers, Liz Van Horne,

    V. Allen, C. Egan, K. Stockton, V. Roth

    Nosocomial Clostridium difficile Infection (CDI): Things Are Not Always As They Seem

  • Disclosure

    • None of the authors on this presentation have anything to disclose

  • • Clostridium difficile is an anaerobic gram positive spore forming bacterium

    • It can cause a severe inflammatory colonic disease with a high morbidity and mortality

    • Most commonly associated with health care, occurring in hospitals and other health care facilities

    Clostridium difficile

    https://www.google.ca/url?q=http://depts.washington.edu/molmicdx/mdx/tests/cdiff.shtml&sa=U&ei=UfR0U_KSC5GLqAbkvICwDw&ved=0CD8Q9QEwCQ&usg=AFQjCNGQZhKKxfnWU-b5v4xT29U_jWxFWA

  • Setting

    • The Ottawa Hospital (TOH): A multi site tertiary care facility with 1,200 beds

    • Most acute inpatient care is provided at 2 sites

    Civic

  • Background

    • CNISP CDI rates were stable between 1997- 2007 (0.66 and 0.73 per 1000 patient days, respectively)*

    • Healthcare – associated CDI is frequent and of increasing severity

    • CDI attributable mortality increased from 1.5% in 1997 to 5.3% in 2011 per 100 HA-CDI cases*

    *Public Health Agency of Canada, CNISP, Clostridium difficile Associated Disease (CDAD) Surveillance

  • Issue

    • 2012-2013 we experienced several prolonged

    outbreaks on our in patient units despite reinforcement of:

    -routine practises -prompt isolation of symptomatic patient -enhanced environmental cleaning with bleach -implementation of bedpan liner waste management transmission persisted

  • Issue Continued

    • In spite the implementation of these measures as well as the increase in resources and energy the outbreaks were not terminated

    • Several units continued to have an increase in nosocomial cases

    • Public Health Ontario was asked to conduct a review

  • Definition

    • Outbreak was defined as 3 or more geographically clustered cases of laboratory confirmed HA-CDI on one w/u within 7 day or 5 cases within 4 weeks

    • Healthcare associated CDI was defined as onset of symptoms >72 hours after admission or symptoms present on admission with a previous admission in the preceding 8 weeks

  • Investigation

    • Public Health Laboratory performed molecular typing of outbreak isolates

    • Methodology used was pulse-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE)

    • 41 isolates from 9 different outbreaks involving 48 patients (~3-9/outbreak) were typed

  • V CDI

    CDI

    CDI

    CDI

    CDI

    CDI

    CDI CDI

    CDI

    H

    NAP 4

    G

    L M

    NAP 1 E

    NAP11

    F

    Floor Plan of An Outbreak Unit B

  • PFGE Typing

    Different Same *Provided by Marina Lombos, Public Health Laboratory, Toronto, Ontario

  • Results • NAP-1 strain accounted for 39% of all isolates but was

    the predominant strain in only one outbreak • 16 different PFGE patterns were identified • A median of 3 PFGE patterns was identified in each

    outbreak (range 2-6) • Findings suggested that isolates from our outbreaks

    at TOH were polyclonal

  • Outbreak Typing Results

    Campus Unit No.

    patients No. samples

    typed No. unique

    strains Predominant

    Strain

    General

    A 5 4 2 none

    B* 12 9 9 none

    C* 9 8 6 none

    D 9 8 5 none

    E 3 2 2 none

    Civic F* 10 10 3 NAP1

    TOTAL 48 41 16 NAP1

    * 2 outbreaks on each of these units

  • Lessons Learned

    • Things are not always as they seem. HA cases that appear to be linked were caused by different strains of Clostridium difficile

    • In spite of our findings basic infection prevention measures remain the cornerstone in reducing transmission of Clostridium difficile

  • Conclusion

    • Prevention strategies need to shift with a greater focus on appropriate antimicrobial use

    • Typing did not produce the results we expected leaving many questions still unanswered

    • The epidemiology of CDI in the community also deserves further study.

  • Acknowledgements

    I would also like to thank and recognize the

    following individuals:

    • Dr Gary Garber

    • Cathy Egan

    • Liz Van Horne

    • Vanessa Allen

    • Marina Lombos