The Journal of hospital infection
-
In order to measure the incidence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and of Enterobacteriaceae producing extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBLE), and to evaluate the impact of the national guidelines for multidrug-resistant bacteria (MDRB) prevention in hospitals of Northern France, a multicentre study was conducted for three months every year starting in 1996, in volunteer hospital laboratories. All clinical specimens positive for MRSA and ESBLE were prospectively surveyed. ⋯ In the 23 hospitals that participated in the survey every year, the proportion and incidence of ESBLE decreased. Hence, despite recommendations as for isolation precautions, MRSA remains poorly controlled and requires more effective measures.
-
The aim of this investigation was to study the molecular epidemiology of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in a university hospital in Italy. Sixty-one clinical isolates were collected from 43 patients during a two-year period. The majority of specimens were from the respiratory tract (41 of 43) of patients in the adult intensive care unit (ICU) (19 of 43) or cystic fibrosis (CF) patients (13 of 43). ⋯ Antimicrobial susceptibility identified a multi-resistant phenotype in all S. maltophilia PFGE clones. The majority of PFGE clones identified (six of seven clones from patients in the ICU) were susceptible to fluoroquinolones. Mechanical ventilation was associated with S. maltophilia acquisition in the ICU.
-
Nosocomial infection surveillance is common in the USA and in some European countries but in Italy few hospitals use it. In order to evaluate its usefulness in clinical practice we performed a one year prospective epidemiological study that included 178 patients, admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU) for more than 48 h. Median ICU stay was 16 days. ⋯ Severe sepsis or septic shock occurred in 30 patients (8/1000 ICU-days), and three patients died from septic shock of unknown origin (10% case fatality rate). There were no case fatalities for pneumonia and bacteraemic sepsis. Overall, ICU-acquired infections were not associated with an increased risk of death.
-
Using macrorestriction of genomic DNA and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, we examined 504 non-redundant, infection-causing human isolates of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus susceptible (G(S): 238 isolates) or resistant to gentamicin (G(R): 266 isolates). The strains were isolated at Albert Chenevier Hospital (Créteil, France) between 1 January 1991 and 31 December 1998. Their susceptibility to erythromycin, lincomycin, tetracycline, rifampicin, fusidic acid and fosfomycin was also studied. ⋯ Resistance to erythromycin and lincomycin only was found in 70 G(S) isolates; this profile accounted for approximately half the isolates in 1992/1993 and only one-third in 1998. These results, obtained over an eight-year period, show an overall increase in antibiotic susceptibility. They confirm the spread of two major clones of MRSA-G(S) and support the hypotheses that G(S) strains derive from G(R) strains that have lost the aac6'-aph2" gene; and that G(S) strains are genetically related to those that were present before the use of gentamicin and persisted at a low frequency until 1992-1993.