Staphylococcus spp Resistance to Chlorhexidine: Is There Any Impact Related to the Routine Use for Hand Hygiene?
Background: Although guidelines recommend the use of chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG) for hand hygiene (HH), the impact of its routine use on antimicrobial resistance is not clear. Objective: To analyze the impact on the CHG susceptibility among isolates obtained from hands of HCW during its routine us...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Infection control and hospital epidemiology 2020-10, Vol.41 (S1), p.s390-s391 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background:
Although guidelines recommend the use of chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG) for hand hygiene (HH), the impact of its routine use on antimicrobial resistance is not clear.
Objective:
To analyze the impact on the CHG susceptibility among isolates obtained from hands of HCW during its routine use for HH.
Methods:
We conducted a crossover study at 4 medical-surgical wards of a tertiary-care hospital in São Paulo, Brazil. In 2 units (intervention group), we established routine use of CHG for HH. For the other 2 units (control group), regular soap was provided. The availability of alcohol formulation for HH was not changed during the study. Every 4 months we swapped the units, ie, those using CHG changed for regular soap and vice versa. At baseline, we cultured the hands of HCWs. Only nursing staff hands were investigated. For hand culturing, HCWs placed their hands inside a sterile bag containing a solution of phosphate-buffered saline, Tween 80, and sodium thiosulfate. After the solution incubated overnight, it was inoculated onto brain-heart infusion. Next, it was plated on McConkey and Mannitol agar. MALDI-TOF was used for identification. Agar dilution was performed for
Staphylococcus
spp. We selected all
Staphylococcus
spp with MIC ≥ 8 and performed inhibition of efflux pump test. For isolates that showed a decrease of 2 dilutions, we searched the gene
qac
A/B by polymerase chain reaction.
Results:
We obtained 262 samples from HCW hands yielding 428 isolates. The most frequent genera were
Staphylococcus
spp (58%),
Acinetobacter
spp (8%),
Enterobacter
spp (8%),
Stenotrophomonas
spp (5%),
Klebsiella
spp (4%),
Pseudomonas
spp (3%), and others (14%).
Staphylococcus
spp were less frequent in the intervention compared to control group (43% vs 61%; OR, 0.48; 95% CI, 0.29–0.69;
P
= .005). Among all
Staphylococcus
spp, the proportion of chlorhexidine resistance (RCHG; MIC ≥ 8) was 12%. All resistant isolates recovered susceptibility after inoculation with pump-efflux inhibitor. For pump-inhibited isolates, 53% had the gene
qac
A/B amplified by PCR. We did not investigate RCHG among gram-negative isolates. There was a nonsignificant increase in
Staphylococcus
spp RCHG in the intervention group (4% to 6%;
P
= .90). Healthcare-acquired infection rates did not change significantly during the intervention. The consumption of CHG increased from 7.3 to 13.9 mL per patient day.
Conclusions:
We did not detect a significant difference in RCHG during the routine use of |
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ISSN: | 0899-823X 1559-6834 |
DOI: | 10.1017/ice.2020.1028 |