Author:
Martins Ianick Souto,Pellegrino Flávia Lúcia Piffano Costa,Freitas Andrea d'Avila,da Silva Santos Marisa,Ferraiuoli Giovanna lanini d'Alemeida,Vasques Màrcia Regina Guimarães,Amorim Efigenia Lourdes Teixeira,Oliveira Sandra,Nouér Simone Aranha,Cardoso Fernando Luiz Lopes,Mascarenhas Luiz Affonso,Magalhães Ana Cristina Gouveia,Cleinman Isabella Barbosa,Figueiredo Agnes Marie Sá,Moreira Beatriz Meurer
Abstract
Objective.
To investigate an outbreak of healthcare-associated
Burkholderia cepacia complex (BCC) primary
bloodstream infections (BCC-BSI).
Design and Setting.
Case-crossover study in a public hospital, a university hospital and a
private hospital in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, from March 2006 to May
2006.
Patients.
Twenty-five patients with BCC-BSI.
Design.
After determining the date BCC-BSI symptoms started for each patient, 3
time intervals of data collection were defined, each one with a duration of 3
days: the case period, starting just before BCC-BSI symptoms onset; the control
period, starting 6 days before BCC-BSI symptoms onset; and the washout period,
comprising the 3 days between the case period and the control period. Exposures
evaluated were intravascular solutions and invasive devices and procedures.
Potential risk factors were identified by using the McNemar
χ2 adjusted test. Cultures of samples of potentially
contaminated solutions were performed. BCC strain typing was performed by
pulsed-field gel electrophoresis using
Spel.
Results.
The statistical analysis revealed that the use of bromopride and dipyrone
was associated with BCC-BSI. A total of 21 clinical isolates from 17 (68%) of
the 25 patients and an isolate obtained from the bromopride vial were available
for strain typing. Six pulsotypes were detected. A predominant pulsotype (A)
accounted for 11 isolates obtained from 11 patients (65%) in the 3 study
hospitals.
Conclusion.
Our investigation, using a case-crossover design, of an outbreak of
BCC-BSI infections concluded it was polyclonal but likely caused by infusion of
contaminated bromopride. The epidemiological finding was validated by
microbiological analysis. After recall of contaminated bromopride vials by the
manufacturer, the outbreak was controlled.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Epidemiology
Cited by
13 articles.
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