1 / 36

Extended spectrum B-lactamase producing E.coli in the community and in hospital

Extended spectrum B-lactamase producing E.coli in the community and in hospital. Dr Graham Harvey Consultant Microbiologist Director of Infection Prevention & Control Shrewsbury & Telford Hospitals NHS Trust, Shropshire,UK. PENICILLIN. BETA LACTAM RING.

adamdaniel
Download Presentation

Extended spectrum B-lactamase producing E.coli in the community and in hospital

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Extended spectrum B-lactamase producing E.coli in the community and in hospital Dr Graham Harvey Consultant Microbiologist Director of Infection Prevention & Control Shrewsbury & Telford Hospitals NHS Trust, Shropshire,UK

  2. PENICILLIN BETA LACTAM RING BETA LACTAMASES enzymes that inactivate the beta-lactam ring CEPHALOSPORIN BETA LACTAM RING

  3. Some beta-lactamases only inactivate a small number of antibiotics e.g. penicillin • Others have extendedspectrum to all the penicillins and cephalosporins e.g. cefuroxime, ceftriaxone (ESBLs) • In addition may also carry resistance to other antibiotics e.g. ciprofloxacin.

  4. ESBL Evolution • Mid 1980s • Variants of TEM and SHV • Breakdown 3rd generation cephalosporins • Mainly in hospital Klebsiella • Spread world wide

  5. Control of a hospital outbreak of ESBL producing Klebsiella peumoniae • Aberdeen, Scotland, 1992-4 • ITU associated • SHV-2 ESBL • Increased use of third generation cephalosporins • Only sensitive to amikacin & imipenem • Environmental contamination (sinks) • Improved plumbing ! • Multi-disciplinary team approach

  6. The rise of CTX-M in EuropeLivermore et al JAC (2007) 59 165-174 • Increasing problem since 2000. • Mainly in E coli • Now over 50 types described • 1998 Poland CTX-M 3 & 15 • 2000 Spain CTX-M 9 • 2001 France CTX-M 15 • 2003 Italy CTX-M 1& 15

  7. Spread of CTX-M in the UK • 2000-1 – First UK isolates (Klebsiella) • 2003 onwards – widespread across UK • E coli • Especially CTX-M-15 • Five major clones A-E • Also diverse unrelated strains

  8. www.hpa.org.uk/hpa publications/esbl_report_05/default.htm

  9. Health Protection Agency report September 2005 • Recommendations • Laboratory detection of ESBL producers • Urine samples in Rx failures • Treatment guidelines • Better surveillance • Investigation of animal carriage

  10. Health Protection Agency report September 2005 • Infection Control of CTX-M • Need for hospital and community guidelines • ? Interventions needed • ? Endemic in hospitals • Limited data as only recently emerged as a problem

  11. Maps of Europe and Shropshire, UK.

  12. Shropshire hospital setting • 540,000 population. • 2 main hospital sites 300 & 520 beds 30 Km apart • 7 intermediate care hospitals : 3 in Wales • 230 bed spinal injury & orthopaedic hospital • 12% single rooms • Minimal neutropenia / transplantation.

  13. Start of the Shropshire outbreak • Multi-resistant E coli UTIs from May 2003 • Mainly community patients • Two E.coli strains • Both resistant to quinolones, cephalexin and trimethoprim. • Both sensitive to nitrofurantoin & carbapenems • One strain (strain A) gentamicin resistant.

  14. E.S.B.L producing E coliin Shropshire • 1 Jan 03 to 30 Sep 04 – 364 cases • 68% female • mean age 74 years • 49% community samples • Diabetes, dementia and malignancy

  15. Early Findings • Gentamicin sensitive strain initially apparent as a community problem. • samples from GPs and few from psychiatric hospital. • Only 1 nursing home resident. • No apparent serious cases. • Gentamicin resistant strain mainly in hospital patients.

  16. The evolution of the outbreak – Clinical and epidemiology 1. • In-patient cases initially in Telford Hospital • Later spread to Shrewsbury Hospital • No obvious ward focus (21wards) • 90% Hospital contact in past 3 years • But in 10% cases no local acute hospital contact.

  17. Response to the outbreak .1 • Community/Hospital outbreak team (Aug 03) • Letter to consultants/GPs Sept 03 • Restrictive antibiotic reporting • Increased use of carbapenems • Cases isolated in side rooms

  18. Response to the outbreak 2 • March 2004 new hospital antibiotic guidelines introduced and strongly promoted

  19. Antibiotic Policy changes • Nitrofurantoin substituted for quinolones in UTIs • Imipenem substituted for quinolones in serious sepsis • Ertapenem introduced for ESBL sepsis • Gentamicin substituted for cephalosporins in surgical prophylaxis • Return to amoxycillin in respiratory tract infections

  20. Response to the outbreak .3 • Increased use of hand gel • Hand gel by each bedside • Marking of patient’s electronic records • Daily computer search for re-admissions • Patient screening (stool & urine) • “ESBL management unit” • Cohort ward • Opened May to June 04 • Closed July and August 04 • Re-opened September 04

  21. Shropshire ESBL outbreakAug02-Dec04 Antibiotic policy Isolation ward

  22. “Do the sick no harm” • The ones that got away • If you do not look you will not find • Antibiotic disc problems • Gentamicin assays • Asymptomatic carriage in the community • You are what you eat

  23. Quinolone R Cephalexin S Urinary E coli • Jan 2003 to March 2004 • 562 ESBL isolates in 370 patients • 98 patients had CiproR TriR NitS “LexS” strains • ESBL found in 27 of them 68 pats

  24. Laboratory testing issues • Cefotaxime and ceftazidime • or Cefpodoxime +/- clavulanate • Manufacture (Oxoid) MHRA • Batch to batch variation +/- 40% • 10 ug could be 6-14 ug • Mixing batches • Test like with like • Storage esp clavulanate

  25. The iceberg effect

  26. CTX-M isolated from chicken meat by country of origin ECCMID 2007

  27. Where are we now ?

  28. Shrewsbury and Telford NHS Trust New hospital cases of ESBL from May 2003 to March 2007 Ward opened May – June 04 Ward re-opened Sept 04 to Dec 05 2007 2003 Total 20 2004 Total 147 2005 Total 80 2006 Total 53

  29. New Shropshire community cases of ESBL producing E coli from 2002 to 2006

  30. Conclusion • ESBL vs MRSA • Epidemic strains • Multiple antibiotic resistance • Laboratory tests • Detection • Chromogenic agar • Silent carriage • Screening • Hospital spread • Isolation • Hand hygiene • Community reservoir

  31. MRSA- 4002 ESBL- 662 3572 466 134 36 26 260 780 C DIFF - 1104 And finally… Jan 2003 to Dec 2006 5274 patients with ESBL, MRSA and/or C DIFF ESBL 662 cases 9.3% C DIFF +ve 25.6% MRSA +ve

More Related