Author:
NOURSE C.,BYRNE C.,MURPHY H.,KAUFMANN M. E.,CLARKE A.,BUTLER K.
Abstract
We previously reported an outbreak of vancomycin resistant enterococci (VRE) in a paediatric
oncology unit in December 1995 which was associated with widespread environmental
contamination of the unit with VRE. We undertook this study to evaluate the effectiveness of
the infection control policy instituted subsequent to the outbreak and to investigate the
underlying prevalence of VRE colonization in hospitalized, outpatient and community-based
children. We sought to establish the molecular similarity of VRE isolates from the study. Stool
specimens were obtained from outpatients at risk of VRE, hospital inpatients and from healthy
community-based children. VRE colonization was eradicated from the inpatient unit within 11
months, but in outpatients, 16 months after the outbreak, 4 of 137 (2·9%) attending oncology
outpatients, 5 of 65 (7·7%) with cystic fibrosis and 1 of 12 (8·3%) with liver disease were
found to be colonized with VRE. The isolates were all Enterococcus faecium, Van A phenotype
except one E. casseliflavus of the Van C phenotype. All were unique in SmaI DNA
macrorestriction patterns with the exception of two isolates, which were similar to the original
outbreak strain and three further isolates of a single strain but which differed from the
outbreak strain. Of 315 hospital inpatients, 2·5% were colonized with VRE of the Van C
resistance phenotype but VRE was not detected in 116 healthy, community-based children. We
conclude that effective strategies can successfully control spread of VRE but despite a low
prevalence of VRE colonization in hospital patients and in community-based children,
outbreaks can occur when infection control practices are not optimal. Continued vigilance to
detect VRE and limit spread within hospitals is therefore necessary.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
31 articles.
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