Title: Controlling the Spread of MRSA
1Controlling the Spread of MRSA
- WPHA/WALHDAB
- Annual Conference
- May 23, 2007
2Controlling the Spread of MRSATopics
- History
- Characteristics
- Staphylococcal organisms
- HA MRSA
- CA MRSA
- Control strategies
- Healthcare settings
- Community settings
3Controlling the Spread of MRSA
- Abbreviations
- MRSA methicillin resistant Staphylococcus
aureus - HA healthcare associated
- CA community associated
- ARO antibiotic resistant organisms
- Definitions
- Colonization organism is on or in the body but
not causing disease - Infection organism is present and causing signs
and symptoms of disease
4History
1928
Serendipitous discovery of penicillin
5History
- 1942
- Antibiotics touted as the magic bullet
-
6History
- 1950s PRSA
- 1959 methicillin introduced
- 1961 MRSA appears in UK
- 1968 outbreaks of staph in US nurseries
-
7History
"At the dawn of a new millennium, humanity is
faced with another crisis. Formerly curable
diseases...are now arrayed in the increasingly
impenetrable armor of antimicrobial
resistance." --Director-General, WHO-- 2000
Margaret Chan
8Characteristics
9Characteristics
- Reservoirs
- Skin
- Nares
- Axilla
- Pharynx
- Perineum
- Contaminated surfaces, items
10Characteristics
- Causes minor infections such as pimples, boils,
other skin conditions - Impetigo
- Major infections include bacteremia, cellulitis,
pneumonia, osteomylitis - Scalded skin syndrome in newborns
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12Characteristics
- Food poisoning
- Toxic shock syndrome
- Major cause of hospital acquired infections
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15Characteristics
- Why focus on MRSA?
- Increased morbidity, mortality, cost
- More prevalent than other resistant organisms
- Threat of vancomycin resistance (VISA, VRSA)
- New community strains
16WI Guidelines for AROPremises
- MRSA is spread by direct and indirect contact.
- Both colonized and infected persons are sources
of transmission. - Colonized persons are not always identified.
- Most persons with histories of MRSA are either
permanently or intermittently colonized.
17WI Guidelines for AROPremises
The most common way resistant organisms are
spread in health care settings is from patient to
patient via the hands of health care workers.
18WI Guidelines for ARO
- Administrative measures
- Prudent use of antibiotics
- Decolonization
- Surveillance
- Infection control
19WI Guidelines for AROAdministrative Measures
- Administration representative on infection
control committee - Monitor hand hygiene/std precautions
- Infection prevention
- Limit use of indwelling devices
- Vaccines
- Implement major IC Practice Guidelines
20WI Guidelines for AROSurveillance
- Determine prevalence
- Identify reservoirs
- Monitor rates of transmission
21WI Guidelines for AROSurveillance
- All acute care organizations should
- Use clinical culture data to monitor trends in
proportions of ARO - Maintain line lists of known infected and
colonized patients and isolate appropriately
22WI Guidelines for AROSurveillance
- New CDC isolation guidelines require that MRSA
rates must be decreasing in each health care
organization
23WI Guidelines for AROSurveillance
- Identify unknown reservoirs by using screening
cultures on high risk patients - Elderly
- Chronically ill
- Previously colonized
- Long term care residents
- Isolate colonized and infected sources
standard PLUS contact precautions
24Reservoir for the Spread of Antibiotic Resistant
Pathogens
clinical infections
colonized (asymptomatic) patients
25WI Guidelines for ARODecolonization
- Not recommended as a routine component of control
- Eradication not long-term
- Increased mupirocin resistance
- Optimum methods not established
- Decision to treat
- If individual would benefit clinically
- If ongoing transmission would be reduced
- Decision to treat HCW based on epidemiologic
evidence
26WI Guidelines for AROInfection Control
- Standard precautions
- All patients
- Contact with blood, body fluids, mucous
membranes, non-intact skin - Proper handling of laundry
- Disposal of infectious waste
- Hand hygiene alcohol hand sanitizer
27WI Guidelines for AROInfection Control
- Contact precautions
- Private room or co-habitate
- Gowns/glove upon entry to room
- Limit patient movement outside room
- Clean and disinfect all items before removing
from room
28WI Guidelines for AROInfection Control
- Contact precautions (cont)
- Patients should wash hands before leaving room
and have clean gown/clothing - Includes patients with uncontrolled body
secretions, wound drainage
29HA MRSA Summary
- The proportion of S. aureus clinical isolates
that are MRSA should be decreasing in acute care
settings - Strategies
- Active surveillance cultures
- Strict adherence to contact precautions and hand
hygiene
30CA MRSA
- Emerged in 1990s
- Distinct from HA MRSA
- Epidemiologically
- Clinically
- Genetically
31 Comparison of HA-MRSA and CA-MRSA
SCC Staphylococcal cassette chromosome PVL
Panton Valentine leukocidin
32CA and HA MRSA Prevalence in Three StatesActive
Bacterial Core Surveillance System, CDC 2001-02
_ HA MRSA _ CA MRSA
20
12
9
80
88
91
Minnesota
Georgia
Maryland
33CA MRSA
- Prevalence lt 1 of the US population is
colonized - Outbreaks have occurred in
- Prisons
- Sports teams
- Military recruits
- MSM
- IV drug users
34CA MRSA
- Risk factors for community transmission
- Crowding
- Close contact
- Compromised skin
- Contaminated surfaces, items
- Cleanliness (lack of)
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36EMERGEncy ID Net Study
- Bacterial isolates from purulent skin/soft tissue
(SST) infections in 11 US emergency departments
during August 2004 - S. aureus was isolated from 320/422 (76) of
patients with SST infections - 59 were MRSA
- 97 were USA300 strain
- NEJM 2006355666-74
37EMERGEncy ID Net Study
- SCCmec type IV and PVL toxin gene detected in 98
of MRSA isolates - Among MRSA isolates
- 95 susceptible to clindamycin
- 6 susceptible to erythromycin
- 60 susceptible to fluoroquinolones
- 100 susceptible to rifampin and TMP/SMX
- 92 susceptible to tetracycline
38EMERGEncy ID Net Study
- Potential indicators of CA MRSA infection vs.
other bacteria - Antibiotic in past month
- Abscess
- Reported spider bite
- History of MRSA infection
- Close contact with someone having similar
infection
39EMERGEncy ID Net Study
- Antibiotic therapy was not concordant with
results of susceptibility testing in 100 of 175
patients who received antibiotics (57) - Conclusions
- MRSA most common identifiable cause of SST
infections - When antibiotics indicated, clinicians should
consider obtaining cultures and modifying empiric
therapy to cover MRSA
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41Wisconsin Prevalence
MRSA Outpatient Clinical Isolates 2004
42CA MRSA
- Healthcare associated transmission
- Postpartum women at Columbia University Hospital
- Post-op infections in orthopedic patients at
Grady Memorial, Atlanta - Newborn nurseries in Chicago and Los Angeles
43CA MRSA
44CA MRSA
- 1. CA MRSA is the leading cause of skin and soft
tissue infections in adults - Culture purulent material
- Consider coverage for MRSA in empiric antibiotic
therapy
45CA MRSA
- 2. CA MRSA spreads more readily in the community
than HA MRSA - Look for infections in household contacts when
treating patients - Give instructions to patients on how to reduce
transmission in the household - Suspicion of CA MRSA increased in members of
sports teams, day care attendees, inmates,
military personnel -
46CA MRSA
- 3. CA MRSA can spread in the health care setting
- Place persons with suspected CA MRSA in contact
precautions in both outpatient and inpatient
settings. Index of suspicion increased for - Pustules with necrotic center
- Larger than usual pustules that expand rapidly
- Pustules present in other household contacts
47Management of CA MRSAClinician information
- Localized infections TMP/SMX, clindamycin
- Serious, systemic infections vancomycin,
linezolid - Provide patient education on wound care, hand
washing, and hygiene - Instruct outpatients to return if symptoms do not
resolve
48Management of CA MRSAPatient education
- Wash hands
- Consider use of gloves when doing wound care
- Cover wounds
- Dispose of heavily soiled dressings in sealed
plastic bags - Shower before close contact with others
- Do not share personal items
- Disinfect contaminated surfaces
49Prevention of Transmission in Community Settings
Increased awareness among health care providers
Early detection and appropriate treatment
Screen high risk groups Monitor close contacts
50Prevention of Transmission in Community Settings
- Hand hygiene
- Personal hygiene/covering skin lesions
- Cleaning shared equipment
- Processing laundry properly
51CA MRSA
- Messages for public
- Most infections are mild skin infections
- Infections are treatable
- Risk of infection can be reduced by keeping skin
clean and healthy
52Keep skin clean
53Keep skin intact
54MRSA
- Link to
- Guidelines for Management of Patients with ARO
- CA MRSA Guidelines
- CA MRSA Patient Pamphlet
-
- http//dhfs.wisconsin.gov/communicable/
- Communicable/HlthProvider.htm
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56Gwen Borlaug, CIC, MPHDivision of Public
Health1 West Wilson Street Room 318Madison, WI
53701608-267-7711borlagm_at_dhfs.state.wi.us