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Multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii.


To understand the epidemiology of multidrug-resistant (MDR MDR,
n See multidrug resistance.

MDR,
n the abbreviation for minimum daily requirement, specifically the Minimum Daily Requirements for Specific Nutrients compiled by the United States Food and Drug Administration.
) Acinetobacter baumannii Acinetobacter baumannii is a species of pathogenic bacteria which forms opportunistic infections.[1] There have been many reports of drug-resistant A. baumannii infections among American soldiers wounded in Iraq.  and define individual risk factors for multidrug resistance multidrug resistance,
n the adaptation of tumor cells or infectious agents to resist chemotherapeutic agents.
, we used epidemiologic methods, performed organism typing by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis gel electrophoresis
n.
Electrophoresis performed in a gel composed of agarose, polyacrylamide, or starch.
 (PFGE PFGE Pulsed-Field Gel Electrophoresis ), and conducted a matched case-control retrospective study retrospective study,
a study in which a search is made for a relationship between one phenomenon or condition and another that occurred in the past (e.g.
. We investigated 118 patients, on 27 wards in Israel, in whom MDR A. baumannii was isolated from clinical cultures. Each case-patient had a control without MDR A. baumannii and was matched for hospital length of stay, ward, and calendar time. The epidemiologic investigation found small clusters of up to 6 patients each with no common identified source. Ten different PFGE clones were found, of which 2 dominated. The PFGE pattern differed within temporospatial clusters, and antimicrobial drug susceptibility patterns varied within and between clones. Multivariate analysis multivariate analysis,
n a statistical approach used to evaluate multiple variables.

multivariate analysis,
n a set of techniques used when variation in several variables has to be studied simultaneously.
 identified the following significant risk factors: male sex, cardiovascular disease Cardiovascular disease
Disease that affects the heart and blood vessels.

Mentioned in: Lipoproteins Test

cardiovascular disease 
, having undergone mechanical ventilation mechanical ventilation
n.
A mode of assisted or controlled ventilation using mechanical devices that cycle automatically to generate airway pressure.
, and having been treated with antimicrobial drugs (particularly metronidazole metronidazole /met·ro·ni·da·zole/ (-ni´dah-zol) an antiprotozoal and antibacterial effective against obligate anaerobes; used as the base or the hydrochloride salt. It is also used as a topical treatment for rosacea. ). Penicillins were protective. The complex epidemiology may explain why the emergence of MDR A. baumannii is difficult to control.

**********

Acinetobacter baumannii has emerged as an important nosocomial nosocomial /noso·co·mi·al/ (nos?o-ko´me-il) pertaining to or originating in a hospital.

nos·o·co·mi·al
adj.
1. Of or relating to a hospital.

2.
 pathogen (1-5). Hospital outbreaks have been described from various geographic areas (6-9), and this organism has become endemic in some of them. The role of the environmental contamination in the transmission of nosocomial infections Nosocomial infections
Infections that were not present before the patient came to a hospital, but were acquired by a patient while in the hospital.

Mentioned in: Enterobacterial Infections, Staphylococcal Infections
 in general and in A. baumannii infections in particular is well recognized (10,11). A. baumannii does not have fastidious fas·tid·i·ous
adj.
1. Possessing or displaying careful, meticulous attention to detail.

2. Difficult to please; exacting.

3. Having complex nutritional requirements. Used of microorganisms.
 growth requirements and is able to grow at various temperatures and pH conditions (12). The versatile organism exploits a variety of both carbon and energy sources. These properties explain the ability of Acinetobacter species to persist in Verb 1. persist in - do something repeatedly and showing no intention to stop; "We continued our research into the cause of the illness"; "The landlord persists in asking us to move"
continue
 either moist or dry conditions in the hospital environment, thereby contributing to transmission (13,14). This hardiness, combined with its intrinsic resistance to many antimicrobial agents Antimicrobial agents

Chemical compounds biosynthetically or synthetically produced which either destroy or usefully suppress the growth or metabolism of a variety of microscopic or submicroscopic forms of life.
, contributes to the organism's fitness and enables it to spread in the hospital setting.

The nosocomial epidemiology of this organism is complex. Villegas and Hartstein reviewed Acinetobacter outbreaks occurring from 1977 to 2000 and hypothesized that endemicity, increasing rate, and increasing or new resistance to antimicrobial drugs in a collection of isolates suggest transmission. These authors suggested that transmission should be confirmed by using a discriminatory genotyping test (15). The importance of genotyping tests is illustrated by outbreaks that were shown by classic epidemiologic methods and were thought to be caused by a single isolate transmitted between patients; however, when molecular typing of the organisms was performed, a more complex situation of multiple unrelated strains causing the increasing rates of infections by A. baumannii was discovered (16-18).

Almost 25 years ago, researchers observed acquired resistance of A. baumannii to antimicrobial drugs commonly used at that time, among them aminopenicillins, ureidopenicillins, first and second-generation cephalosporins Cephalosporins Definition

Cephalosporins are medicines that kill bacteria or prevent their growth.
Purpose

Cephalosporins are used to treat infections in different parts of the body—the ears, nose, throat, lungs, sinuses, and
, cephamycins, most aminoglycosides, chloramphenicol chloramphenicol (klōr'ămfĕn`əkŏl'), antibiotic effective against a wide range of gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria (see Gram's stain). It was originally isolated from a species of Streptomyces bacteria. , and tetracyclines Tetracyclines Definition

Tetracyclines are medicines that kill certain infection-causing microorganisms.
Purpose

Tetracyclines are called "broad-spectrum" antibiotics, because they can be used to treat a wide variety of
 (19). Since then, strains of A. baumannii have also gained resistance to newly developed antimicrobial drugs. Although multidrug-resistant (MDR) A. baumannii is rarely found in community isolates, it became prevalent in many hospitals (20). MDR A. baumannii has recently been established as a leading nosocomial pathogen in several Israeli hospitals, including our institution (21,22). Several locally contained small outbreaks of MDR A. baumannii occurred in our institution during the late 1990s. In 1999, however, the incidence of MDR A. baumannii isolation had doubled compared to the previous 2 years, and the organism became endemic in many wards (unpub. data).

The likelihood of isolation of A. baumannii from a hospitalized patient is related to temporospatial (extrinsic EVIDENCE, EXTRINSIC. External evidence, or that which is not contained in the body of an agreement, contract, and the like.
     2. It is a general rule that extrinsic evidence cannot be admitted to contradict, explain, vary or change the terms of a contract or of a
, ecologic characteristics) factors such as colonization pressure (23), nurse-to-patient ratio, and other ward characteristics and to individual patient risk factors (characteristics). The current study was designed to examine the occurrence and spread of A. baumannii within our institution, as well as to define individual risk factors for isolation of this organism.

Methods

Hospital Setting, Data Collection, and Microbiologic Testing

This study was performed at the Tel-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Israel, a 1,200-bed tertiary care tertiary care Managed care The most specialized health care, administered to Pts with complex diseases who may require high-risk pharmacologic regimens, surgical procedures, or high-cost high-tech resources; TC is provided in 'tertiary care centers', often  teaching hospital with 70,000 admissions annually. Approximately 82,500 clinical microbiologic cultures are processed annually. We designed this as a matched case-control study case-control study,
n an investigation employing an epidemiologic approach in which previously existing incidents of a medical condition are used in lieu of gathering new information from a randomized population.
 to identify the individual risk factors for having MDR A. baumannii. We also performed epidemiologic investigations and genetic typing of the organisms to clarify the spread of this nosocomial pathogen.

Case-patients were defined as patients from whom MDR A. baumannii was isolated from any clinical culture (not surveillance cultures) during a 6-month period, from January 1, 2001, to June 30, 2001. A control patient was matched to each study patient on temporospatial factors as previously described (24). Briefly, controls were randomly chosen from the list of patients who stayed on the same ward in the same calendar month as the matched case-patient and who were hospitalized for at least the same number of days by the day the culture yielded MDR A. baumannii in the study patient. Controls were not MDR A. baumannii positive (i.e., the patient's samples were cultured, and either non-MDR A. baumannii or no A. baumannii was isolated, or the patient's samples were never cultured). Random control selection was performed by creating a list of all possible controls, assigning each candidate a random number, and choosing the highest random number (without replacement).

Case-patients and control patients were included only once in the study. Data were collected from the patients' records and from hospital computerized databases into a pre-prepared electronic questionnaire (Microsoft Access A database program for Windows, available separately or included in the Microsoft Office suite. Access is programmable using Visual Basic for Applications (VBA). Access can read Paradox, dBASE and Btrieve files, and using ODBC, Microsoft SQL Server, SYBASE SQL Server and Oracle data. , Microsoft Corp., Redmond, WA, USA). The parameters registered for each patient (case-patients and controls) were age, sex, habits of smoking and alcohol consumption before hospitalization, cause and ward of hospitalization, transfer from another institution or ward within our institution, intensive care unit (ICU ICU intensive care unit.

ICU
abbr.
intensive care unit



ICU

see intensive care unit.

ICU 
) stay, underlying disorders, immunosuppressive therapy Immunosuppressive therapy
Medical treatment in which the immune system is purposefully thwarted. Such treatment is necessary, for example, to prevent organ rejection in transplant cases.
, severity of illness as defined by the McCabe score (25), functional capacity and neurologic condition at time of isolation of A. baumannii, Foley catheter Fo·ley catheter
n.
A catheter held in the bladder by an inflatable balloon.


Foley catheter
A two-channel catheter with a balloon on the bladder end of one channel.
, invasive devices, surgery, mechanical ventilation, dialysis, infection, and antimicrobial drug therapy. Only variables occurring before inclusion in the study (culture day for case-patients and match day for controls) were analyzed as possible risk factors. A. baumannii was isolated from clinical specimens submitted to the microbiology laboratory and identified by using the Gram-Negative Identification Panel (Microscan, Dade Behring Inc., Sacramento, CA, USA). This system may not distinguish between closely related genotypic strains of Acinetobacter, and thus, some of these organisms may belong to these closely related strains. Susceptibilities were determined by automated microdilution broth testing (Neg/Urine Combo panel, Dade Behring Inc.). Resistance to imipenem and meropenem was confirmed by using Kirby-Bauer disk diffusion, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the National Council for Clinical Laboratory Standards (NCCLS NCCLS National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards ) guidelines. A. baumannii isolates were collected prospectively and stored at -70[degrees]C for further work-up.

Analysis of Chromosomal DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 by Pulsed-Field Gel Electrophoresis (PFGE)

Isolates of our patients, when available, were kept frozen at -70[degrees]C and genetically characterized with PFGE. DNA preparation and cleavage with 20 U of ApaI endonuclease endonuclease /en·do·nu·cle·ase/ (-noo´kle-as) any nuclease specifically catalyzing the hydrolysis of interior bonds of ribonucleotide or deoxyribonucleotide chains.  (New England Biolabs New England Biolabs (NEB) produces and supplies reagents for the life science industry. NEB offers a large selection of recombinant and native enzymes for genomic research. It also offers products in the areas related to proteomics and drug discovery. , Beverly, MA, USA) were preformed as previously described (26). Electrophoresis was performed in a 1% agarose agarose

more highly purified form of agar with similar uses to agar and widely used in the separation of nucleic acid fragments.
 gel (BMA BMA British Medical Association.  products) prepared and run in 0.5 x Tris-borate-EDTA buffer on a CHEF-DR III apparatus (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, USA). The initial switch time was 5 s, the final switch time was 35 s, and the run time was 23 h at 6 V/cm. Gels were stained in ethidium bromide Ethidium bromide (sometimes abbreviated as EtBr) is an intercalating agent commonly used as a nucleic acid stain in molecular biology laboratories for techniques such as agarose gel electrophoresis. , destained in distilled water Noun 1. distilled water - water that has been purified by distillation
H2O, water - binary compound that occurs at room temperature as a clear colorless odorless tasteless liquid; freezes into ice below 0 degrees centigrade and boils above 100 degrees centigrade;
, and photographed by using a Bio-Rad GelDoc 2000 camera. DNA patterns were analyzed visually and by using Diversity software (Bio-Rad). PFGE DNA patterns were compared and interpreted according to the criteria of Tenover et al. (27). The obtained PFGE DNA patterns were used to cluster the clones of the A. baumannii clinical isolates that were included in the study.

Definitions

We defined A. baumannii as MDR when the organism was resistant to all studied agents (including piperacillin/tazobactam, cefepime, ceftazidime, aztreonam, ciprofloxacin ciprofloxacin /cip·ro·flox·a·cin/ (sip?ro-flok´sah-sin) a synthetic antibacterial effective against many gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria; used as the hydrochloride salt.

cip·ro·flox·a·cin
n.
, gentamicin gentamicin /gen·ta·mi·cin/ (jen?tah-mi´sin) an aminoglycoside antibiotic complex isolated from bacteria of the genus Micromonospora, , tobramycin tobramycin /to·bra·my·cin/ (to?brah-mi´sin) an aminoglycoside antibiotic derived from a complex produced by Streptomyces tenebrarius, ), but we allowed susceptibility to amikacin, ampicillin-sulbactam, imipenem, meropenem, and minocycline. Infection was defined according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center.  guidelines and modified to include community-acquired infections and to exclude asymptomatic bacteriuria asymptomatic bacteriuria Urology The presence of bacteria in the urine at a level indicating infection without Sx; in ♀ w/ DM, antimicrobial therapy does not ↓ complications. See Cystitis, Too numerous to count.  (28).

Standard criteria were used to define underlying disorders. Disease was considered to be active if signs of disease were clinically apparent or if the patient received treatment for the disease. A patient was considered to be receiving immunosuppressive therapy if he had undergone chemotherapy within 3 weeks, if he had been treated with [greater than or equal to] 220 mg of prednisone prednisone (prĕd`nĭsōn): see corticosteroid drug.  daily for [greater than or equal to] 2 weeks before entering the study, or if he had recently received antirejection an·ti·re·jec·tion
adj.
Preventing rejection of a transplanted tissue or organ.
 drugs or other immunosuppressive therapy.

Severity of illness due to comorbidities was defined according to the McCabe score (25). Functional capacity during the index hospitalization was divided into 3 categories: independent, needing help for activities of daily living, and bedridden bed·rid·den or bed·rid
adj.
Confined to bed because of illness or infirmity.
. Renal failure renal failure
n.
Acute or chronic malfunction of the kidneys resulting from any of a number of causes, including infection, trauma, toxins, hemodynamic abnormalities, and autoimmune disease, and often resulting in systemic symptoms, especially edema,
 was defined as a creatinine creatinine /cre·at·i·nine/ (kre-at´i-nin) an anhydride of creatine, the end product of phosphocreatine metabolism; measurements of its rate of urinary excretion are used as diagnostic indicators of kidney function and muscle mass.  level >2 rag/dL. Neurologic function was categorized according to 3 conditions: full consciousness, confusional state or dementia, and unconscious.

For each patient included in the study, we noted whether a susceptible A. baumannii was isolated in any culture before isolation of the MDR strain. We noted the number of antimicrobial drugs that the patient received between the time of admission until inclusion in the study, and we recorded home antimicrobial drug therapy separately. Recent hospitalization was defined as hospital stay within 3 months of the index hospitalization. We noted any surgical procedure, mechanical ventilation, and invasive procedure Invasive procedure may refer to:
  • "Invasive Procedures" (DS9 episode), the fourth episode of the second season of the television series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
  • Invasive Procedures (novel), a 2007 novel by Orson Scott Card and Aaron Johnston
 that took place 1 month before the patient's inclusion in the study.

Statistical Analysis

Statistics were run in Stata version 7 (Stata Corp., College Station, TX). All analyses were matched to correspond to the study design. All variables were examined by univariate analysis with the McNemar test and paired Student t test. Variables with a p value <0.2 in the univariate analysis were included in the multivariate model. Risk factors were examined by using conditional logistic regression. A final model was built that included all the variables with a p value <0.2. Variables that were not retained in the model by this procedure were then tested for confounding confounding

when the effects of two, or more, processes on results cannot be separated, the results are said to be confounded, a cause of bias in disease studies.


confounding factor
 by adding them 1 at a time to the model and examining their effects on the [beta] coefficients. Variables which caused substantial confounding (change in [beta] coefficient of >10%) were included in the final model. After constructing the explanatory model, the effect of exposure to antimicrobial agents (i.e., antimicrobial treatment before inclusion in the study) was examined by adding them to the model.

In addition to examining statistical significance and confounding, the effect modification effect modification Epidemiology An interaction among multiple possible cause-and-effect relationships, where the estimate of the effect of one factor on a disease process depends on other factors in the study  between variables was evaluated by testing appropriate interaction terms for statistical significance. Colinearity was examined by replacing variables with each other and examining the effect on the model. All statistical tests were 2-tailed. A p value [less than or equal to] 0.05 was considered significant.

Results

From January 1, 2001, to June 30, 2001, we identified 133 patients with a clinical culture of MDR A. baumannii. Four patients were not hospitalized in our institution (i.e., they were hospitalized elsewhere) and were excluded from the study. Charts were available for 120 case-patients, but no controls could be matched for 2 of them. Thus, 236 patients were included in the study (118 case-patients and their matched controls). Sites from which A. baumannii was initially isolated included respiratory tract respiratory tract
n.
The air passages from the nose to the pulmonary alveoli, including the pharynx, larynx, trachea, and bronchi.


Respiratory tract 
 38 (32%), wounds 23 (19.5%), urine 22 (19%), blood 19 (16%), and sterile fluids and catheter tips 16 (13.5%).

Epidemiology and PFGE Typing

Among the 118 case-patients, the first MDR A. baumannii in 104 (88%) was isolated after more than 72 h of hospitalization (mean 17.5 [+ or -] 23.7 days). Among the other 14 case-patients, 12 were admitted from another institution or had been hospitalized recently. No nosocomial origin was documented in 2 cases. A. baumannii was initially isolated in 27 different wards. Figure 1 shows the case distribution among them. A higher concentration of patients was clearly evident in 3 wards: the general ICU (ward "I", 16 cases), and two internal medicine wards (ward Q, 10 cases, and ward W, 9 cases).

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

The time distribution of new cases is presented in Figure 2. We did not find any aggregate of cases within a specific ward at any specific time. The occurrence during the months February, May, and June was lower than during January, March, and April. This circumstance is not explained by differences in infection control measures recommended; during the entire study period this included contact isolation of every patient from whom MDR A. baumannii was isolated and cohorting of case-patients if single patient rooms were not available. A statement was added to the culture result: "MDR organism; contact isolation is required." Epidemiologic nurses checked with the ward to confirm that the patient was isolated. On certain floors, surveillance (nose, forearms, armpits, and perirectal swabs) and environmental cultures (using swabs, contact plates, and direct culturing of fluids) were performed to try to identify a reservoir of organism. In this study, case-patients and controls were matched by ward and calendar time to focus on individual risk factors and not on differences between wards and temporal changes.

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]

A total of 51 unique patient MDR strains were available for further study, and they were analyzed by using PFGE. We identified 10 distinct clones of A. baumannii. Figure 3 shows 6 different PFGE-defined clones, each having from 1 to 4 subtypes showing a 1- to 2-band difference. Two of the 10 different clones dominated: 22 case-patients had clone A and 10 case-patients had clone B, although no specific clone dominated in a specific ward but rather each clone was spread among several wards during the entire study period (Table 1). We also found various antimicrobial drug susceptibility phenotypes (all belonging to our definition of MDR) within each PFGE clone, but almost all cases of carbapenem resistance belonged to clone A.

[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]

Individual Risk Factors

The study patients' characteristics are displayed in Table 2. Case-patients were similar to their matched control patients with respect to mean age (67.7 vs 64.4 years) and sex distribution (men, n = 71 [60%] vs controls, n = 59 [50%]). The groups were also similar in habits of smoking and alcohol consumption and in the occurrence of coexisting conditions of lung disease lung disease Pulmonary disease Pulmonology Any condition causing or indicating impaired lung function Types of LD Obstructive lung disease–↓ in air flow caused by a narrowing or blockage of airways–eg, asthma, emphysema, chronic bronchitis; , diabetes, kidney, liver disease Liver Disease Definition

Liver disease is a general term for any damage that reduces the functioning of the liver.
Description

The liver is a large, solid organ located in the upper right-hand side of the abdomen.
, malignancy, and posttransplantation condition. The groups differed in the prevalence of ischemic heart disease Ischemic heart disease
Insufficient blood supply to the heart muscle (myocardium).

Mentioned in: Myocarditis

ischemic heart disease 
: study case-patients 69% vs. controls 52% (OR 2.33, p = 0.006).

Hospital events (before study entry) differed between case-patients and controls. Case-patients were more likely to have received mechanical ventilation (OR 2.9, p = 0.001), to be treated with metronidazole (OR 1.9, p = 0.038), and to have a Foley catheter (OR 2.42, p = 0.005). They were less likely to have had another bedside surgical procedure before the isolation of A. baumannii (OR 0.53, p = 0.035).

Several variables tended to be more associated with case-patients, but the values did not reach statistical significance: admission from another institute (OR 2.1, p = 0.06), unconsciousness (OR 0.706, p = 0.07), and previous use of third-generation cephalosporin cephalosporin (sĕf'əlōspôr`ĭn), any of a group of more than 20 antibiotics derived from species of fungi of the genus Cephalosporium and closely related chemically to penicillin. Cephalosporins, e.g.  (OR 1.63, p = 0.093) and of macrolides (OR 2.25, p = 0.056). A matched multivariate model, adjusted for the hospital length of stay, was developed by using conditional logistic regression (Table 3). The variables that were identified by this model as being significant risk factors for MDR A. baumannii were male sex (OR 3.8, p = 0.002), ischemic heart disease (OR 3.3, p = 0.005), mechanical ventilation (OR 6.2, p < 0.001), and home antimicrobial drug use (OR 4.7, p = 0.018). Two agents used in the hospital were associated with MDR A. baumannii: metronidazole was identified as a risk factor (OR 2.3, p = 0.018), and the penicillin group was identified as having a protective effect (OR = 0.38, p = 0.029).

Discussion

We sought to understand the epidemiology of MDR A. baumannii and to define the individual risk factors for acquiring this infectious agent infectious agent Pathogen, see there . Our findings illustrated its complex epidemiology and delineated individual risk factors. The complex epidemiology may explain the difficulties encountered in controlling the emergence of this nosocomial pathogen.

Almost all cases of MDR A. baumannii in our study were hospital acquired: 88% were acquired in our institution during the index hospitalization, and 10% were imported into the hospital by patients with recent exposure to the healthcare system. The MDR A. baumannii strains isolated in our institution belonged to multiple PFGE clones: 50% of the isolates that were typed belonged to 2 dominant clones, and the other, nondominant clones caused few cases each.

Clones did not cluster in place (i.e., hospital location) or in time. Moreover, when an increase in incidence was observed in a certain ward, the increase was not associated with a single clone, and up to 4 different clones were present concomitantly in a ward. We also found antimicrobial susceptibility profile variation within clones and similarities between clones, which showed that susceptibility pattern was not a useful marker for clonality. Carbapenem resistance occurred in 75% of the isolates belonging to 1 of the 2 dominant clones (clone A) but was rare among other clones. This finding illustrates well the complexity of the epidemiology of this nosocomial pathogen. Even with molecular typing data, determining the modes of spread of this organism was difficult, partly because we did not have a complete collection of the isolates. Despite our expending extensive effort, we were unable to determine the source of these resistant strains. Although we believe that patient-to-patient transmission through contaminated contaminated,
v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material.
2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials.
3. an infective surface or object.
 hands of healthcare workers and fomites fomites

see fomes.
 is the main route by which these MDR organisms spread, the combined epidemiologic and molecular data did not directly support this hypothesis. The lack of evidence for patient-to-patient spread in our study may be related to transferring patients between wards and the presence of a substantial number of undetected carriers (the "submerged iceberg phenomenon") who spread the bacteria. Alternative explanations, such as repeated entry (import) of the same clone to the hospital ecosystem at various times and locations (e.g., from an disease-endemic institution or contaminated supply or food) must be considered as well.

The individual risk factors for isolation of MDR A. baumannii that were identified by the multivariate analysis were male sex, underlying comorbidity of ischemic heart disease, mechanical ventilation, and antimicrobial drug treatment. The finding of male sex and of ischemic heart disease being risk factors for carriage of and infection with resistant gram-negative bacilli bacilli /ba·cil·li/ (bah-sil´i) plural of bacillus.

bacilli

see bacillus.
 had also been observed by our group, as well as by others for carriage of extended spectrum [beta]-lactamase (ESBL ESBL Extended Spectrum Beta Lactamase
ESBL East Staffordshire Badminton League (UK) 
) producing Enterobacteriaceae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa Pseudomonas aeruginosa A normal soil inhabitant and human saprophyte that may contaminate various solutions in a hospital, causing opportunistic infection in weakened Pts Clinical Infective endocarditis in IVDAs, RTIs, UTIs, bacteremia, meningitis, 'malignant'  (29-31). We hypothesize hy·poth·e·size  
v. hy·poth·e·sized, hy·poth·e·siz·ing, hy·poth·e·siz·es

v.tr.
To assert as a hypothesis.

v.intr.
To form a hypothesis.
 that these associations may be related to the following factors: 1) patient-to-patient transmission within multipatient rooms (patients who are segregated by sex and need for intensive monitoring intensive monitoring Intensive care The continuous monitoring of Pt vital signs, with electronic hookups to the nursing station; IM encompasses real time measurement of BP and ABGs via arterial lines, pulse oximetry, continuous cardiac monitoring, respiration, ); 2) use of certain nonantimicrobial medication, such as calcium channel blockers Calcium Channel Blockers Definition

Calcium channel blockers are medicines that slow the movement of calcium into the cells of the heart and blood vessels.
, which may predispose pre·dis·pose
v.
To make susceptible, as to a disease.
 for adherence or invasiveness by affecting the host or the pathogens (32,33); and 3) hormonal or other sex differences which may predispose a person for colonization and infection. These hypotheses are currently being studied in our facilities. The multivariate analysis did not identify admission from another institution as a significant risk factor. This probably relates to the small number (and proportion) of patients admitted from other institutions who were identified to be carriers of MDR A. baumannii. These few patients may, however, have played an important role to the entrance of new clones and the spread of the organisms within our institution. Moreover, case-patients that are not detected may still be important in the spread of these organisms. Overall, we believe that the identified risk factors represent both severity of the patient's condition, use of invasive devices, and effect on the normal flora Normal flora
The mixture of bacteria normally found at specific body sites.

Mentioned in: Sputum Culture, Wound Culture
, all of which promote MDR A. baumannii colonization, growth, and invasiveness.

The administration of penicillin had a protective effect against isolation of MDR A. baumannii. This protective effect was significant after confounding by multivariate analysis was controlled for. Penicillins lack activity against these MDR strains, and the protective effect cannot relate to sulbactam, since a sulbactam combination is seldom used in our institution. To the best of our knowledge, such an effect has not been observed previously. Specific penicillins may possibly cause specific changes in the microflora microflora /mi·cro·flo·ra/ (-flor´ah) the microscopic vegetable organisms of a special region.
Microflora
The bacterial population in the intestine.
 that oppose colonization and growth of Acinetobacter spp Acinetobacter spp Bacteriology A widely distributed bacterium found in moist hospital environments, which may establish itself in the respiratory flora and on the skin of Pts with prolonged hospitalization, often via contaminated medical instruments–eg, ., but the validity of this observation awaits further research. As for many other resistant organisms, metronidazole was a significant risk factor for MDR A. baumannii, likely because of its effects on the competitive normal intestinal flora. The observation that carbapenem resistance was much more frequent in the dominant clone could suggest that this phenotype may have contributed to the evolutionary success of the clone.

A previous study clearly demonstrated that the epidemiology and risk factors may vary for different clones (17). This finding may lead to a dilution of effects and even to opposing effects by some risk factors. In our study, we did not analyze clone-specific risk factors because we did not believe that we truly had an epidemic clone and because the number of patients affected by each clone was too small to allow a statistically significant comparison.

Temporospatial factors, although they undoubtedly have an important role in the spread of resistant organisms, were not within the scope of this study. We controlled for these factors by the study design, i.e., matching by hospital location, length of stay before inclusion in the study, and calendar time. Confounding may, however, have been introduced to our study by factors for which we did not control, such as residing in a multipatient room next to a patient with MDR A. baumannii.

We used risk set sampling (by matching for time at risk) but did not allow case-patients to be eligible to be controls before becoming cases. Since no clustering in time and place occurred, and controls were chosen from 35,000 admitted patients, this method of sampling should not have yielded biased results.

Despite the large number of cases that we identified, we were unable to understand the mode of spread and the reason for emergence of these organisms in our institution. This fact may be because only some of the isolates were available for typing or because of the complex mode of spread in our hospital. Further study will be required to more fully understand the intricate phenomenon of MDR A. baumannii spread.
Table 1. Characteristics of 51 strains available for PFGE
typing, 2001 *

Clone              No. of      No. of        Months
                  isolates     wards

A                    22          14       January-June
B                    10           8      February-July
C                     4           4       January-June
D                     2           2      January, June
E                     2           1         January
F                     3           3       March, April
I                     5           4      February-April
Lone ([dagger])       1           1         January
Lone ([dagger])       1           1         January
Lone ([dagger])       1           1          April

Clone            Carbapenem  Sulbactam
                 resistance  resistance

A                    16          1
B                     1
C                     1          2
D
E
F
I                     2
Lone ([dagger])
Lone ([dagger])
Lone ([dagger])

* PFGE, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis.

([dagger]) Lone, unique clone; each had a different ward of isolation.

Table 2. Group comparison: patients' characterization and possible
risk factors for Acinetobacter baumannii isolation * ([dagger])

                                        Cases, n (%)  Controls, n (%)

Demographic parameters
  Average age, y (SD)                   67.7 (16.42)   64.4 (19.15)
  Female                                   47 (40)        59 (50)
  Male                                     71 960)        59 (50)
  Smoking                                  35 (30)        43 (36)
  Alcohol usage                              7 (6)         5 (4)
  Admission from home                      23 (20)        12 (10)
Concomitant diseases
  Ischemic heart disease                   82 (69)        61 (52)
  Lung disease                             59 (50)        50 (42)
  Diabetes                                 39 (50)        28 (24)
  Liver disease                             10 (8)        18 (15)
  Kidney disease                           35 (30)        27 (23)
  Posttransplantation                        7 (6)         3 (3)
  Malignancy                               35 (30)        38 (32)
Clinical parameters
  Unconsciousness                          40 (43)        26 (22)
  Bedridden                                88 (75)        79 (76)
  In-house dialysis                         11 (9)         4 (3)
  Mechanical ventilation                   70 (59)        47 (40)
  Admission in last 3 months               56 (47)        52 (44)
  ICU stay                                 34 (92)        35 (30)
  Immunosuppression treatment              29 (25)        27 (32)
  Major surgery                            33 (28)        33 (28)
  Isolation of susceptible                   6 (5)         6 (5)
    Acinetobacter before inclusion
Antimicrobial treatment
  Home antimicrobial treatment             16 (41)         6 (5)
  In-house antimicrobial treatment        104 (88)        96 (81)
  Average number of antimicrobial        3.025 (2)       2.97 (2)
    agents (SD)
  Penicillin administration               42 (63)         54 (46)
    (double dagger])
  Cephalosporin use                       31 (26)         34 (92)
    (1st, 2nd generation)
  3rd generation cephalosporin use        53 (54)         42 (63)
  4th-generation cephalosporin use        17 (41)         17 (14)
  Macrolides                              21 (18)         11 (9)
  Metronidazole                           48 (14)         35 (30)
  Gentamicin                              23 (19)         27 (32)
  Amikacin                                12 (10)         19 (16)
  Clindamycin                              7 (6)           8 (7)
  Vancomycin                              22 (19)         22 (19)
  Carbapenem                             10 (8.47)       10 (8.47)
Invasive procedures
  Central line                            69 (58)         70 (59)
  Arterial line                           35 (30)         34 (29)
  Foley catheter                          96 (81)         76 (64)
  Other bedside procedures ([section])    63 (53)         78 (67)

                                         OR      95% CI     p value

Demographic parameters
  Average age, y (SD)                   1.012  0.996-1.03    0.134
  Female
  Male                                  1.48    0.89-2.45    0.13
  Smoking                               0.72    0.41-1.27    0.26
  Alcohol usage                          1.5    0.42-5.31    0.53
  Admission from home                   2.12    0.96-4.76    0.065
Concomitant diseases
  Ischemic heart disease                2.33    1.27-4.27    0.006
  Lung disease                          1.578   0.82-2.72    0.183
  Diabetes                              1.578   0.88-2.8     0.119
  Liver disease                         0.555   0.25-1.2     0.136
  Kidney disease                        1.388   0.76-2.54    0.288
  Posttransplantation                   2.333   0.6-9.02     0.22
  Malignancy                            0.923   0.53-1.6     0.777
Clinical parameters
  Unconsciousness                       0.706   0.48-1.02    0.069
  Bedridden                             1.45    0.82-2.56    0.201
  In-house dialysis                      2.5    0.78-7.97    0.121
  Mechanical ventilation                2.916   1.51-5.61    0.001
  Admission in last 3 months            1.148   0.68-1.92     0.6
  ICU stay                              0.984   0.94-1.02    0.473
  Immunosuppression treatment           1.095   0.9-1.97     0.763
  Major surgery                           1     0.51-1.95      1
  Isolation of susceptible                1                    1
    Acinetobacter before inclusion
Antimicrobial treatment
  Home antimicrobial treatment          2.666   1.04-6.81    0.04
  In-house antimicrobial treatment      1.727   0.82-3.63    0.149
  Average number of antimicrobial       1.015       1        0.847
    agents (SD)
  Penicillin administration             0.647   0.37-1.1     0.112
    (double dagger])
  Cephalosporin use                      0.9   0.476-1.701   0.746
    (1st, 2nd generation)
  3rd generation cephalosporin use      1.631   0.92-2.88    0.093
  4th-generation cephalosporin use        1     0.49-2.04      1
  Macrolides                            2.25    0.97-5.17    0.056
  Metronidazole                         1.933   1.03-3.6     0.038
  Gentamicin                            0.777   0.38-1.56    0.481
  Amikacin                               0.5    0.2-1.24     0.134
  Clindamycin                           0.875   0.32-2.41    0.796
  Vancomycin                            0.944   0.48-1.83    0.866
  Carbapenem                            0.875   0.32-2.41    0.796
Invasive procedures
  Central line                          0.958   0.54-1.7     0.884
  Arterial line                         0.933   0.45-1.93    0.85
  Foley catheter                        2.42    1.3-4.52     0.005
  Other bedside procedures ([section])  0.531   0.29-0.95    0.035

* OR, odds ratio, CI, confidence interval; SD, standard deviation;
ICU, intensive care unit.

([dagger]) All variables were recorded up to the time of inclusion
in the study.

([double dagger]) Including semisynthetic penicillin and [beta]-
lactamase-contain ing products.

([section]) Including tracheostomy, bedside debridement, chest tube
insertion, and gastrointestinal endoscopy.

Table 3. Multivariate analysis for risk factors for Acinetobacter
baumannii * ([dagger])

Parameter (double dagger])              OR     95% CI    p value

Male sex                               3.84  1.63-8.99   0.002
Ischemic heart disease                 3.35  1.44-7.77   0.005
Mechanical ventilation                 6.27  2.27-17.33  <0.001
Penicillin use ([section])             0.38  0.16-0.90   0.029
Metronidazole use                      2.33  0.98-5.83   0.071
Any home antimicrobial drug treatment  4.74  1.31-17.15  0.018

* OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval.

([dagger]) Adjusted for length of hospital stay prior to entry to the
study.

([double dagger]) All parameters had been present before A. baumannii
identification.

([section]) Including semisynthetics with or without a [beta]-lactamase
inhibitor (never sulbactam).


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Aharon Abbo, * Shiri Navon-Venezia,* Orly Hammer-Muntz, * Tami Krichali, * Yardena Siegman-Igra, * and Yehuda Carmeli *

* Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Tel Aviv, Israel

Address for correspondence: Yehuda Carmeli, Division of Epidemiology, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, 6 Weizmann St, Tel Aviv 64239, Israel; fax: 972-3-6974966; email: ycarmeli@bidmc.harvard.edu

All material published in Emerging Infectious Disease An emerging infectious disease (EID) is an infectious disease whose incidence has increased in the past 20 years and threatens to increase in the near future. EIDs include diseases caused by a newly identified microorganism or newly identified strain of a known microorganism (e.g.  is in the public domain and may be used and reprinted without special permission; proper citation, however, is appreciated.

Dr. Abbo is in clinical development at Biosense Webster (Israel). This work was part of his M.Sc. dissertation in internal medicine. His primary, research interests include the clinical epidemiology of infectious diseases and cardiology.
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Title Annotation:Research
Author:Carmeli, Yehuda
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