Identification and control of a gentamicin resistant, meticillin susceptible Staphylococcus aureus outbreak on a neonatal unit

Author:

Otter Jonathan A12,Davies Bethany3,Menson Esse4,Klein John L3,Watts Timothy L4,Kearns Angela M5,Pichon Bruno5,Edgeworth Jonathan D1,French Gary L1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Clinical Infection and Diagnostics Research (CIDR), Department of Infectious Diseases, King’s College London and Guy’s and St Thomas NHS Foundation Trust, London,UK

2. Bioquell UK Ltd, Andover, Hampshire, UK

3. Directorate of Infection, Guy’s and St Thomas NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK

4. Paediatric Infectious Diseases & Immunology, Guy’s and St. Thomas NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK

5. Staphylococcus Reference Unit, Microbiology Services Colindale, Health Protection Agency, London, UK

Abstract

We describe the identification and control of an outbreak of gentamicin resistant, meticillin susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (GR-MSSA) on a 36-bed neonatal unit (NNU) in London. Control measures included admission and weekly screening for GR-MSSA, cohorting affected babies, environmental and staff screening, hydrogen peroxide vapour (HPV) for terminal disinfection of cohort rooms, and reinforcement of hand hygiene. Seventeen babies were affected by the outbreak strain over ten months; seven were infected and ten were asymptomatic carriers. The outbreak strain was gentamicin resistant and all isolates were indistinguishable by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. The outbreak strains spread rapidly and were associated with a high rate of bacteraemia (35% of 17 affected patients had bacteraemia vs. 10% of 284 patients with MSSA prior to the outbreak, p=0.007). None of 113 staff members tested were colonised with GR-MSSA. GR-MSSA was recovered from 11.5% of 87 environmental surfaces in cohort rooms, 7.1% of 28 communal surfaces and 4.1% of 74 surfaces after conventional terminal disinfection. None of 64 surfaces sampled after HPV decontamination yielded GR-MSSA. Recovery of GR-MSSA from two high level sites suggested that the organism could have been transmitted via air. Occasional breakdown in hand hygiene compliance and contaminated environmental surfaces probably contributed to transmission.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

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