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Active Surveillance Cultures and Targeted Decolonization Are Associated with Reduced Methicillin-Susceptible Staphylococcus aureus Infections in VLBW Infants

Authors :
Lukas, Wisgrill
Johanna, Zizka
Lukas, Unterasinger
Judith, Rittenschober-Böhm
Thomas, Waldhör
Athanasios, Makristathis
Angelika, Berger
Source :
Neonatology. 112(3)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) is a major contributor to infectious episodes of very low birth weight infants (VLBWI), resulting in significant morbidity and mortality.To examine the efficacy and safety of surveillance cultures and the decolonization of MSSA-colonized VLBWI.VLBWI admitted to our neonatal wards in 2011-2016 were retrospectively analyzed. Rates of MSSA-attributable infections were compared before and after the implementation of active surveillance cultures and the decolonization of MSSA-colonized patients. The mupirocin susceptibility of isolated MSSA strains was routinely tested.A total of 1,056 VLBWI were included in the study, 552 in the pre-intervention period and 504 in the post-intervention period. The implementation of surveillance cultures and decolonization of colonized patients resulted in a 50% reduction of incidence rates per 1,000 patient-days of MSSA-attributable infections (1.63 [95% CI 1.12-2.31] vs. 0.83 [95% CI 0.47-1.35], p = 0.024). No adverse effects were observed from application of the decolonization protocol with mupirocin and octenidin. No mupirocin-resistant MSSA strains were detected during the study period.Implementation of an active surveillance and decolonization protocol resulted in a reduction of MSSA-attributable infections in VLBWI.

Details

ISSN :
16617819
Volume :
112
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neonatology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........8a8f1b5e2e5d4efb5bb27604634d6cbd