Title: C'difficile infection, ESBL producing Enterobacteriacae and methicillin resistant S'aureus
1C.difficile infection, ESBL producing
Enterobacteriacae and methicillin resistant
S.aureus
- Alasdair MacGowan,
- Professor of Clinical Microbiology and
Antimicrobial Therapeutics, - University of Bristol,
- Consultant Medical Microbiologist,
- North Bristol NHS Trust.
2Structure
- 3 sections on C.difficile, ESBLs and MRSA
- Each section-
- MCQs
- 10 minutes from Alasdair MacGowan
- 5 minutes QA
3Clostridium difficile Test Yourself!
- Clostridium difficile associated diarrorhea is-
- Diagnosed by culture of the organism T/F
-
- Only occurs in hospitalised patients T/F
- A mandatory infection control target for NHS
Trusts T/F - More trouble than its worth T/F
4Risk Factors for C.difficile diarrhoea are-
- Too many pies T/F
- Increasing age T/F
- Long hospital stay T/F
- d) Being admitted to NBT T/F
5Antibiotics and C.difficile Diarrhoea
- Co-amoxiclav is the treatment of
choice T/F - b) Vancomycin is commonly used as therapy T/F
- Cephalosporins and fluouroquinolones have a high
- risk of C.difficile infection T/F
- d) Is just an excuse for pharmacists to question
my prescribing T/F
6Clostridium difficile
- C.difficile is the major cause of antibiotic
associated diarrhoea and colitis - Mainly affects elderly treated with broad
spectrum antibiotics - C.difficile forms spore (like other clostridia)
which are found in liquid faeces - Spore able to survive in the environment and
result in faecal oral spread - Diagnosis by detection of C.difficile toxins
(AB) in liquid stool
7Epidemiology
- Increasing incidence in gt65 years from about
15,000 cases in England in 2000, to 40,000 in
2006 (voluntary reporting) - Mandatory reporting shows an increase from approx
45,000 cases in 2004, to 55-60,000 cases in 2006
and a decline to 50,000 cases in 2007 - Majority of cases of C.difficile associated
diarrhoea (CDAD) hospital acquired some occur
in community
8Local and National Incidence of C.difficile
mandatory reporting ?65 years
9Risk Factors for C.difficile infection
- Increasing age (excluding infants)
- Severity of underlying diseases
- Non-surgical GI procedures
- Presence of a nasogastric tube
- Anti-ulcer medications (Proton Pump Inhibitors)
- ICU stay
- Duration of hospital stay
- Antibiotic exposure
10Antibiotics and C.difficile
- 2nd/3rd generation cephalosporins
- (IV cefuroxime, ceftriaxone, cefotaxime)
- Clindamycin
- Co-amoxiclav/other aminopenicillins
- Fluouroquinolones
- Plus-
- Duration of therapy
- Poly pharmacy
- Antibiotic proplylaxis for gt24h
11Pooled odds ratios for risk of C difficile with
selected antibiotics
Bignardi et al, 1998
12Antibiotics restrictions applied to revised
guidelines.
OK to use flucloxacillinerythromycinco-trimoxaz
olevancomycin1st generation -cephalosporinspeni
cillintetracyclinesgentamicin
Restrict or remove cefuroximeceftriaxoneceftazi
dimeco-amoxiclavciprofloxacinlevofloxacinmoxif
loxacin
13Impact of cephalosporin, fluoroquinolone,
co-amoxiclavrestricted policy
14NBT C.difficile 2007-8 vs interventions
15Management and Treatment of CDAD
- Supportive care (hydration, nutrition)
- Avoid antiperistaltic agents
- Stop (any unnecesary) antibiotics
- Assess severity
- Mild lt3 stools per day types 5-7
- Bristol Stool Chart (soft blobs, fluffy
pieces, mushy stools, liquid, no solid pieces) - Moderate 3-5 stools per day
- Severe peripheral WBC gt15x10a/L, falling eGFR,
temp gt38.5oC, number of stools less reliable - Mild to Moderate Oral metromidazole 400-500 mg
TDS for 10-14d
16Recurrent C.difficile associated diarrhoea
- 10-40 patients have recurrence
- Risk factors-
- Continued use of non-C.difficile antibiotics
after a diagnosis of CDAD - Use of Antacids
- Older age
- Long hospital stay
17Management of Recurrence
- First recurrence, treat as for first episode
- 3rd episode, treat with vancomycin 125 mg QDS po
- Alternatives (no evidence)
- Biotherapy
- Vancomycin 500 mg (no evidence)/10d QDS plus
S.bouldardii 1g OD 28d - Faecal transplant
- Pulsed Therapy
- Vancomycin 125 mg QDS 10ds, stop 14d, rifaximin
400mg BD 14d - Combination therapy
- Vancomycin 125 mg ODS plus rifampicin 600mg OD
7-14 days - Immunotherapy
- IV IG (400mg/kg single dose)
18Clostridium difficile Test Yourself!
- Clostridium difficile associated diarrorhea is-
- Diagnosed by culture of the organism T / F
-
- Only occurs in hospitalised patients T / F
- A mandatory infection control target for NHS
Trusts T / F - More trouble than its worth T / F
19Risk Factors for C.difficile diarrhoea are-
- Too many pies T / F
- Increasing age T / F
- Long hospital stay T / F
- d) Being admitted to NBT T / F
20Antibiotics and C.difficile Diarrhoea
- Co-amoxiclav is the treatment of choice T / F
- b) Vancomycin is commonly used as therapy T / F
- Cephalosporins and fluouroquinolones have a high
- risk of C.difficile infection T / F
- d) Is just an excuse for pharmacists to question
my prescribing T / F
21ESBLs
22Test yourself on ESBLs
- ESBL is short for-
- a) extremely short B.lactams T/F
- b) excessively small B.laces T/F
- c) extended spectrum B.lactamases T/F
- d) extremely susceptible B.lactamases T/F
23ESBL enzymes are found in-
- E.coli T/F
- Klebsiella T/F
- Enterobacter T/F
- The imagination of microbiologists T/F
-
24ESBL producing bacteria-
- Were discovered by Dr E.S.B. Levi T/F
- Commonly cause UTI in association
- with urinary catheters T/F
- Are commoner in patients who have
- received antibiotics T/F
- Are often multi-resistant to non-B.lactam
- antibiotics T/F
25ESBL producing bacteria are best managed by-
- An intravenous cephalosporin T/F
- Passing the problem onto your partner/trainee/prac
tice nurse T/F - Ciprofloxicin if susceptible T/F
- The best oral therapy is not
- established T/F
26What are ESBLs?
- Part of the Beta lactamase family of enzymes
i.e. enzymatically digest B.lactams
penicillins, cephalosporins etc. - Many B.lactams commonest are TEM 1/2 which
digest amoxicillin found in E.coli, H.influenzae - some very rare.
- Usually found on plasmids (extra chromosomal DNA)
easily pass between related bacteria, i.e.
E.coli, Klebsiella etc. - Plasmids normally encode for other unrelated
resistancies, - i.e. trimethoprim, fluoroquinolone, gentamicin.
27Extended spectrum cephalosporins(cefotaxime,
ceftriaxone iv cefexime, cefpodoxime po)
28Where do ESBLs come from?
- 1963 Ampicillin introduced
- 1965 TEM B.lactamases in E.coli
- 1974 TEM B.lactamases in H.influenzae
- 2000 TEM in 40-60 E.coli, 5-20 H.influenzae
- 2004 ESBL described in Germany evolve from
- a) mutation of TEM and other B.lactamases
- b) CTX-M gene sequence similar to naturally
occurring sequences in Kluyvera sp -
-
29(No Transcript)
30CTX-M producers E.coli, Klebsiella spp,
Enterobacter spp
- First described in UK, in Leeds, in 2000
- Commonest ESBL in UK
- Several major clones in hospital community
- Usually urinary isolates
- ESBLs produce resistance to penicillins,
- cephalosporins (without inhibitors), and
associated with resistance to trimethoprim,
fluoroquinolones, gentamicin
31UK Epidemiology Blood Stream Isolates
NB bias towards resistance at Southmead BSI
15-20 ESBL Hospital MSU 7-14 ESBL
Community MSU 4-6 ESBL
32Risk Factors for ESBL producer infection
- Prior to antibiotic use in last 90 days
(especially cephalosporins, trimetroprim,
fluouroquinolones, aminoglycosides) - Previous hospitalisation in 90 days
- Age gt 60 years
- Co-morbidities especially diabetes mellitus
- ICU stay
- Vast majority of isolates urinary often in
CSU no requirement - for therapy
33Antibiotic Therapy
- 3rd generation cephatosporins poor responses
(i.e. IV ceftriaxone) - Carbapenems best therapy, i.e. IV ertapenem 1g 24
hrly IV - Ciprofloxacin and aminoglycoside good outcome if
susceptible - (10-20)
- Oral therapies none proven
- Ciprofloxacin 500 mg BD (if sensitive)
- Nitrofurantoin 50 mg QDS (if sensitive and no
tissue based infection) - Co-amoxiclav 625 mg TDS po
- Co-amoxiclav plus cefixime 200 mg BD po
- Pivmecillinam 400 mg TDS po
34Test yourself on ESBLs
- ESBL is short for-
- a) extremely short B.lactams T / F
- b) excessively small B.laces T / F
- c) extended spectrum B.lactamases T / F
- d) extremely susceptible B.lactamases T / F
35ESBL enzymes are found in-
- E.coli T / F
- Klebsiella T / F
- Enterobacter T / F
- The imagination of microbiologists T / F
-
36ESBL producing bacteria-
- Were discovered by Dr E.S.B. Levi T / F
- Commonly cause UTI in association
- with urinary catheters T / F
- Are commoner in patients who have
- received antibiotics T / F
- Are often multi-resistant to non-B.lactam
- antibiotics T / F
37ESBL producing bacteria are best managed by-
- An intravenous cephalosporin T / F
- Passing the problem onto your partner/trainee/prac
tice nurse T / F - Ciprofloxicin if susceptible T / F
- The best oral therapy is not
- established T / F
38MRSA (Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus)
- Whats new-
- Mandatory elective admission screening for MRSA
- Decline in mandatory reporting of MRSA
bacteraemias - Update of antibiotic management guidelines
39Pre-admission screening of elective admissions
- Announced in the Darzi Report 2007 (Our NHS, Our
future, NHS next stage review) - By April 2009 all elective admissions to be
screened for MRSA - excludes
- Ophthalmology day cases
- Dental day cases
- Endoscopy day cases
- Minor dermatology
- Children
- Maternity, except Caesarian Sections
- Mental Health
- Screen is a nose swab, wound swab if broken skin,
CSU if urinary catheter - MRSA positive patients require decontamination
-
- Mupyrocin nasal TDS 5d
- Octenisan body wash OD 5d - starting 2-3 days
prior to admission
40Pre-admission screening for MRSA
- Massive workload 20-25,000 patients/annum at
NBT - 1-5 are MRSA positive
- No convincing published evidence base
- To be extended to emergency admissions from 1st
April 2011.
41MRSA Bacteraemia Rates Mandatory
Reporting 2001-2009 England
42MRSA Bacteraemias Mandatory Reporting Local
Trusts
43Antibiotic Management Guidelines for MRSA
2008JAC (2009) 63, 849-61
- Skin and soft tissue infection
- Impetigo
- topical mupirocin or fusidic acid if susceptible
(suggested) - (retapamulin, non-inferior to fusidic acid)
- Abscess
- No antibiotics required after incision drainage
small skin abscess (lt5 cm) without surrounding
cellulitis - Cellulitis/Surgical site
- doxycycline or clindamycin unless severe
(strongly recommended) provided strain
susceptible - If clindamycin, tetracycline resistant, consider
co-trimoxazole, linezolid - Outpatient IV therapy, cost effective in
moderate/severe infection, with glycopeptide - or daptomycin (strongly recommended).
44Antibiotic management MRSA (continued)
- Simple UTI
- nitrofurantoin, trimethoprim,
- co-trimoxazole, tetracycline according to
susceptibility (suggested) - Conjunctivitis
- Topical gentamicin, fusidic acid or
chloramphenicol if susceptible (strongly
recommended)
45Summary of UK MRSA susceptibility - 2007
- B.lactams 100 resistant
- Ciprofloxacin 89 resistant (91, NBT)
- Erythromycin 65 resistant (69, NBT)
- Fusidic acid 12 resistant (11, NBT)
- Gentamicin 5 resistant
- Minocycline 0 resistant (0, NBT)
- Mupirocin 3.6 resistant
- Rifampicin 1.2 resistant
- Tetracycline 1.2 resistant
- Trimethoprim 17 resistant
- Co-trimoxazole (4, NBT)