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VEB-1 extended-spectrum [beta]-lactamase--producing Acinetobacter baumannii, France (1).


VEB-1 extended-spectrum [beta]-lactamase-producing 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.  was responsible for an outbreak in hospitals in France This is a list of hospitals in France, sorted by city.
  • Amiens University Hospital- Amiens
  • Angers University Hospital- Angers
  • Centre hospitalier universitaire de Caen- Caen
  • Hôpital d'instruction des armées Percy- Clamart
. A national alert was triggered in September 2003 when 4 hospitals reported clusters of A. baumannfi infection with similar susceptibility profiles. Case definitions and laboratory guidelines were disseminated, and prospective surveillance was implemented; strains were sent to a single laboratory for characterization and typing. From April 2003 through June 2004, 53 hospitals reported 290 cases of A. baumannii infection or colonization; 275 isolates were [bla.sub.VEB VEB

In currencies, this is the abbreviation for the Venezuelan Bolivar.

Notes:
The currency market, also known as the Foreign Exchange market, is the largest financial market in the world, with a daily average volume of over US $1 trillion.
.1]-positive and clonally related. Cases were first reported in 5 districts of northern France, then in 10 other districts in 4 regions. Within a region, interhospital spread was associated with patient transfer. In northern France, investigation and control measures led to a reduction of reported cases after January 2004. The national alert enabled early control of new clusters, demonstrating the usefulness of early warning about antimicrobial antimicrobial /an·ti·mi·cro·bi·al/ (-mi-kro´be-al)
1. killing microorganisms or suppressing their multiplication or growth.

2. an agent with such effects.
 drug resistance.

**********

During the past decade, 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.
 outbreaks of Acinetobacter baumannii have been described with increasing frequency, occurring mostly in intensive care units, burn units, and surgical wards (1,2). Epidemic strains of A. baumannii are often resistant to several antimicrobial drugs, which reduces treatment effectiveness. Nosocomial transmission is from patient to patient and associated with environmental reservoirs (2). Several risk factors for A. baumannii infections have been identified and include severity of underlying disease, duration of hospitalization hospitalization /hos·pi·tal·iza·tion/ (hos?pi-t'l-i-za´shun)
1. the placing of a patient in a hospital for treatment.

2. the term of confinement in a hospital.
, invasive procedures, and prior broad-spectrum antimicrobial drug therapy (2-4). A. baumannii can be detected in patients without infection (i.e., colonization) or as the source in patients with severe infections; the case-fatality ratio case-fatality ratio Epidemiology A value calculated as 100 cases of a disease 'X', divided by the number of persons with the disease who died in a given period of time; the resulting ratio is equal to the rate of a disease's occurrence. See Cause-fatality ratio.  varies from 17% to 46% for septicemia septicemia (sĕptĭsē`mēə), invasion of the bloodstream by virulent bacteria that multiply and discharge their toxic products. The disorder, which is serious and sometimes fatal, is commonly known as blood poisoning.  and can be as high as 70% for pneumonia (1).

A. baumannii is not the most common antimicrobial drug--resistant pathogen Pathogen

Any agent capable of causing disease. The term pathogen is usually restricted to living agents, which include viruses, rickettsia, bacteria, fungi, yeasts, protozoa, helminths, and certain insect larval stages.
 in hospitalized patients; it accounted for 1.2% of all 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 2001 in France (5). However, increasing therapeutic difficulty caused by resistance is a serious concern (6-9). A variety of molecular mechanisms for resistance to broad-spectrum [beta]-lactams have been reported in A. baumannii, such as mutations of penicillin-binding proteins and alterations of membrane permeability, but the most common mechanism is attributed to the presence of [beta]-lactamases encoded by either chromosomes or plasmids (2,10,11). Several class A, B, and D [beta]-lactamases (2,8) as well as chromosome-mediated cephalosporinases (12) confer various resistance phenotypes. Moreover, extended-spectrum [beta]-lactamase (ESBL ESBL Extended Spectrum Beta Lactamase
ESBL East Staffordshire Badminton League (UK) 
)--producing A. baumannii strains have also been described: PER-1 in Turkey, Korea, and France (13-15); VEB-1 in France (4,16); and CTX-M-2 recently in Japan (17).

The [blav.sub.VEB-1] ESBL gene is located in a class 1 integron initially detected in 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'  from Southeast Asia Southeast Asia, region of Asia (1990 est. pop. 442,500,000), c.1,740,000 sq mi (4,506,600 sq km), bounded roughly by the Indian subcontinent on the west, China on the north, and the Pacific Ocean on the east.  (18-20). Subsequently, it has been described in clonally related A. baumannii isolates recovered during an outbreak that lasted 9 months (August 2001-April 2002) in the intensive care unit of a hospital in northern France (4,16). In these strains, the location of the [bla.sub.VEB-1] gene on the chromosomes and integrons was identified (4,16). One year after this outbreak was controlled, nosocomial infections with this A. baumannii strain reemerged in the same area and subsequently spread to hospitals located in other districts in France. We describe the nationwide spread of this strain from April 2003 through June 2004.

In early September 2003, an alert was triggered through the national nosocomial infection Nosocomial infection
An infection that can be acquired in a hospital. ABPA is a nosocomial infection.

Mentioned in: Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis, Hospital-Acquired Infections, Pseudomonas Infections

 notification system A modern notification system is a combination of software and hardware that provides a means of delivering a message to a set of recipients. For example, notification systems can send an e-mail when a new topic has been added to Wikipedia.  when, within a month, 4 hospitals in a single district (Nord) reported 5 clusters of A. baumannii infections with a similar susceptibility profile; all A. baumannii strains were confirmed positive for VEB-1. In October 2003, the National Institute of Public Health (Institut de Veille Sanitaire The French Institut de veille sanitaire (Sanitary Surveillance Institute) is a Health minister public establishment. Its mission is to survey the health of the population and, if required (for example in the case of an epidemics), to alert the administration, health  [InVS]) alerted all hospitals in France of the emergence of this VEB-1--producing A. baumannii strain, disseminated case definitions and laboratory guidelines, and implemented a prospective, laboratory-based national surveillance system.

Materials and Methods

Case Definitions

A probable case was defined as follows: isolation of an

A. baumannii strain showing a multidrug-resistance profile similar to that of the 2001 outbreak strain, susceptible to only imipenem and colistin colistin /co·lis·tin/ (ko-lis´tin) an antibiotic produced by Bacillus polymyxa var. colistinus, related to polymyxin and effective against many gram-negative bacteria; used as the sulfate salt.  (strain AYE [16]), from a patient hospitalized in France between April 1, 2003, and June 30, 2004; only 1 isolate per patient was retained for the study period. A confirmed case was defined as a case for which VEB-1 ESBL production had been confirmed by the central laboratory, which used phenotypic (detection of the synergy image) and genotypic genotypic

emanating from or pertaining to genotype.


genotypic selection
selection of breeding stock on the basis of known inherited characteristics.
 (PCR PCR polymerase chain reaction.

PCR
abbr.
polymerase chain reaction


Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) 
 amplification of the [blav.sub.VEB-1] gene) methods. Infection or colonization was ascertained by clinicians 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.
 national case definitions for nosocomial infections adapted from 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.  (21).

Epidemiologic Investigation

Case definitions were dispatched to hospital laboratories and infection control units. Cases had to be reported to be spoken of; to be mentioned, whether favorably or unfavorably.

See also: Report
 to regional infection control coordinating centers (CCLIN) (22) and local health departments through the national nosocomial infection notification system. In this system, implemented in August 2001, baseline reporting requirements use specific criteria; 1 of them is about rare microorganisms, depending on virulence and antimicrobial drug susceptibility (23). No list of microorganisms or resistance phenotypes exists; reports are based on the epidemiologic knowledge of the infection control units. Hospitals report [greater than or equal to] 1 nosocomial infections on a simple form, which summarizes cases and investigations and allows hospitals to request assistance when needed. For the purpose of this investigation, this system was reinforced as hospitals were asked to report not only A. baumannii infections but also instances of colonization and to send bacterial strains to a central laboratory. All reported cases were investigated by infection control units, local health departments, and CCLIN, the latter offering on-site assistance to hospitals when needed. Data on all cases were centralized cen·tral·ize  
v. cen·tral·ized, cen·tral·iz·ing, cen·tral·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To draw into or toward a center; consolidate.

2.
 and analyzed by InVS, which coordinated the investigation through the Nosocomial Infection Early Warning, Investigation and Surveillance Network (Reseau ré·seau or re·seau  
n. pl. réseaus or réseaux
1. A net or mesh foundation for lace.

2. Astronomy
 d'Alerte, d'Investigation et de Surveillance des Infections Nosocomiale [RAISIN raisin, in botany and cooking
raisin, dried fruit of certain varieties of grapevines bearing grapes with a high content of sugar and solid flesh. Although the fruit is sometimes artificially dehydrated, it is usually sun-dried.
]), a partnership between InVS and CCLIN.

Microbiologic Investigation

All isolates of A. baumannii were recovered from routine clinical specimens (from blood and catheters, urine, respiratory tract respiratory tract
n.
The air passages from the nose to the pulmonary alveoli, including the pharynx, larynx, trachea, and bronchi.


Respiratory tract 
, skin, and wounds) and from colonization samples (from axillary ax·il·lar·y
n.
Relating to the axilla.


Axillary
Located in or near the armpit.

Mentioned in: Mastectomy


axillary

of or pertaining to the armpit.
, pharyngeal pharyngeal /pha·ryn·ge·al/ (fah-rin´je-al) pertaining to the pharynx.

pha·ryn·geal or pha·ryn·gal
adj.
Of, relating to, located in, or coming from the pharynx.
, or rectal swabs), identified by standard techniques at local laboratories, then sent for confirmatory testing to a central laboratory (University Hospital of Bicetre, K.-Bicetre, France).

Identification was confirmed by using the API 32GN system (bioMerieux, Marcy-l'Etoile, France). A. baumannii strains were also tested for the ability to grow at 44[degrees]C in Trypticase soy broth (Oxoid, Unipath Ltd, Basingstoke, UK).

Routine antibiograms were determined by the disk diffusion method on Mueller-Hinton agar (BioRad, MarnesLa-Coquette, France) and interpreted as recommended by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (formerly NCCLS NCCLS National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards ) (24). The presence of ESBL was shown by a synergy image created by using the double-disk synergy test with cefepime, ceftazidime, and ticarcillin-clavulanic acid disks on Mueller-Hinton agar plates (16,18). Synergy images were best seen when plates were incubated at 25[degrees]C. Alternatively, double-disk synergy tests were also performed on plates containing cloxacillin cloxacillin /clox·a·cil·lin/ (klok?sah-sil´in) a semisynthetic penicillin; used as the sodium salt to treat staphylococcal infections due to penicillinase-positive organisms.  (200 [micro]g/mL) (16). Analytic isoelectric focusing isoelectric focusing,
n the ordering and concentration of substances according to their isoelectric points.
 was performed with an ampholine polyacrylamide gel pol·y·a·cryl·a·mide gel
n.
A hydrated polymer consisting of a long chain of amide groups, used as a medium for substances that undergo gel electrophoresis.
 (18).

Molecular Investigation

Genomic DNA genomic DNA
n.
The full complement of DNA contained in the genome of a cell or organism.
 and plasmid extractions and electroporation electroporation (i·lekˈ·trō·p·rāˑ·sh  of plasmid extracts into Escherichia coli Escherichia coli (ĕsh'ərĭk`ēə kō`lī), common bacterium that normally inhabits the intestinal tracts of humans and animals, but can cause infection in other parts of the body, especially the urinary tract.  DH10B were performed (16). Half of A. baumannii isolates from the 4 largest hospitals of 2 districts were randomly selected during the outbreak; all isolates from smaller hospitals or from other districts were analyzed 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 ), using ApaI (Amersham Biosciences, Les Ulis Not to be confused with ULIS.

Les Ulis is a commune in the southwestern suburbs of Paris, France. It is located 23.1 km. (14.4 miles) from the center of Paris. History
The commune of Les Ulis has existed only recently.
, France) (4). ApaI-macrorestriction patterns were digitized and analyzed with Taxotron software (Institut Pasteur, Paris, France) and interpreted according to Tenover et al. (25).

PCR-based amplification of class 1 integron structures and of [bla.sub.VEB-1] gene and subsequent sequencing of the [bla.sub.VEB-1] gene were performed as described (19). Automated sequencing reactions were performed with the same [bla.sub.VEB-1]-specific primers (ABI Abi (ā`bī) [short for Abijah], in the Bible, King Hezekiah's mother.


(Application Binary Interface) A specification for a specific hardware platform combined with the operating system.
 Prism 3100; Applied Biosystems Applied Biosystems, Inc. (formerly NASDAQ: ABIO) is the original name of a pioneer biotechnology company founded in 1981 in Foster City, California, among the Silicon Valley cities of the southern San Francisco Bay Area. , Les Ullis, France).

Results

Epidemiologic Investigation

From April 1, 2004, to June 30, 2004, 53 hospitals (41 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  and 12 long-term care facilities long-term care facility
n.
See skilled nursing facility.
) located in 15 districts reported 290 probable cases, of which 275 (95%) were confirmed. Of the 290 probable cases, 255 (88%) were reported through 116 mandatory notifications, and 35 (12%) were identified through strains directly sent for characterization without notification. The 2 first notifications occurred at the end of July (2 clusters totaling 15 cases) and were followed by 3 other notifications in early September (3 clusters totaling 8 cases). The monthly number of reported cases peaked in October 2003 and again in January 2004 (after intense media coverage of the outbreak); it gradually declined after this date, until the alert was canceled in June 2004 (Figure 1).

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

Cases were first reported in the Nord district and in 4 other contiguous districts, then later in 10 districts in 4 noncontiguous regions. Most reporting hospitals and cases were in 2 adjacent districts (59 and 62 on Figure 2A). The date of case diagnosis indicated that the strain had been circulating since April 2003 in 5 districts of northern France before the outbreak was recognized (Table 1).

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]

Spread of this multidrug-resistant strain was mediated by large referring hospitals. Among 116 notifications, 20% came from regional teaching hospitals, 45% from public general hospitals, 15% from smaller private hospitals, and 20% from long-term care facilities; most affected wards were intensive care units (54 notifications, 47%), medical wards (55 notifications, 47%), reeducation Reeducation may refer to:
  • Brainwashing, efforts aimed at instilling certain beliefs in people against their will.
  • Rehabilitation, therapy to remove or restore a habit or condition, usually medical or penal.
  • Adult education, education for adults.
 and long-term care long-term care (LTC),
n the provision of medical, social, and personal care services on a recurring or continuing basis to persons with chronic physical or mental disorders.
 wards (24 notifications, 21%), and surgical wards (13 notifications, 11%). In 3 regions (northern France, Toulouse-Montpellier, Lyon), investigations suggested that frequent patient transfers between hospitals within the same healthcare network could explain the diffusion of the strain (4,26). In northern France (Nord and Pas de Calais Pas de Ca·lais  

See Strait of Dover.

Noun 1. Pas de Calais - the strait between the English Channel and the North Sea; shortest distance between England and the European continent
Strait of Calais, Strait of Dover
 districts), among 33 hospitals reporting [greater than or equal to] 1 cases, 22 (67%) had an index case directly admitted from a previously affected facility (Figure 2B); however, no such link could be established from 1 region to another.

Of the 217 (71%) cases with clinical documentation, 73 (33%) were infections and 144 (67%) were colonizations. The sources of the clinical isolates were as follows: respiratory tract (33%), skin and wounds (33%), urine (21%), catheters and blood (8%), and others (5%). By the time of notification, 34 (12%) patients had died; however, investigations in northern France suggested that only 17% of the reported deaths were related to the A. baumannii infection.

At several participating hospitals, environmental surfaces were swabbed for culture and found to be positive for VEB-1-producing A. baumannii; the organism was particularly prevalent on bed rails and respiratory equipment (data not shown) and, at 1 hospital, was also found on blood pressure cuffs (27).

Microbiologic Investigation

The antibiogram of VEB-1 ESBL--producing A. baumannii strains was similar for 275 (95%) of the 290 probable cases; the level of resistance to aminoglycosides varied slightly. A synergy image, signature of the presence of an ESBL, could not be observed between clavulanic acid clav·u·lan·ic acid
n.
A drug that inhibits the action of beta-lactamase produced by bacteria, thereby counteracting bacterial resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics.
 and cefepime or ceftazidime disks on a routine antibiogram (Figure 3A) unless cloxacillin-containing plates that inhibit cephalosporinase activity were used (Figure 3B). Alternatively, incubation of the antibiogram at room temperature enhanced the identification of the synergy image (Figure 3C, D). One strain isolated in the Alpes-Maritimes district, next to Nice, was also resistant to colistin. All strains remained susceptible to imipenem.

[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]

Of the 288 A. baumannii isolates, 275 (95%) contained the [bla.sub.VEB-1] gene, according to PCR analysis, which shows a perfect correlation between the antibiogram and the PCR results. All but 2 notifying hospitals isolated the outbreak strain in their wards; for 1 hospital in Isrre and 1 in Tam In Tam (September 22, 1916 - April 1, 2006) is a former Prime Minister of Cambodia. He served in that position from May 6 1973 to December 9 1973, and had a long career in Cambodian politics. , the isolate was not available for confirmatory testing. Genotyping Genotyping refers to the process of determining the genotype of an individual with a biological assay. Current methods of doing this include PCR, DNA sequencing, and hybridization to DNA microarrays or beads.  by PFGE showed that all VEB-1 A. baumannii isolates were clonally related to each other and to the strain responsible for the 2001 outbreak (strain AYE [16]). Although most strains belonged to several subtypes of a given type, differing by only 1 or 2 bands, several strains were more distantly related and belonged to a different type. However, these isolates could be related to the main epidemic strains as illustrated on the dendrogram A dendrogram is a tree diagram frequently used to illustrate the arrangement of the clusters produced by a clustering algorithm (see cluster analysis). Dendrograms are often used in computational biology to illustrate the clustering of genes.  (Figure 4). The epidemic strain isolated in the southern part of the country differed from those in the northern part by at least 3 bands, and thus forms a separate cluster.

[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]

The sequence of [bla.sub.VEB-1] gene and its genetic environment were identical to those previously published for A. baumannii strain AYE (16,18). Finally, the chromosomal position of the integron was verified for 20 isolates randomly chosen in the different regions.

Control Measures

Recommendations for surveillance and control were disseminated to all hospitals (through specific postings on the InVS Web site and email from CCLIN to infection control units and laboratories) and then implemented by infection control units. Based on international guidelines (28, Table 2), the recommendations included the usual standard and contact precautions for limiting the spread of this pathogen within a hospital but added systematic screening in wards at high risk (e.g., intensive care units) and appropriate antimicrobial drug use. In addition, specific recommendations were dispatched to limit the spread of the strain from 1 hospital to another; hospitals were asked to report cases to local health departments and CCLIN, to limit patient admissions, and to inform other hospitals about infected or colonized Colonized
This occurs when a microorganism is found on or in a person without causing a disease.

Mentioned in: Isolation
 patients before transferring them (2 hospitals even closed their wards to new patients).

Discussion

This is the first report of a clonal ESBL-producing A. baumannii outbreak that was nationwide. It was traced in 53 hospitals, initially in northern France and later in 4 distant regions. Recognition of the outbreak and effective tracing of new cases was facilitated by several factors. First, in August 2001, a national nosocomial infection notification system based on specific reporting criteria, including unusual antimicrobial drug resistance profiles, was implemented in France (23). The system relies on hospital infection control units and is coordinated at the regional level by CCLIN created in 1992 (22) and at the national level by InVS, which enables events of national importance to be detected. Second, the French healthcare system is organized around large public, university, or regional tertiary care hospitals that serve an entire region. These hospitals include medical microbiology Medical microbiology is a branch of microbiology which deals with the study of microorganisms including bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites which are of medical importance and are capable of causing diseases in human beings.  laboratories that are well connected to other laboratories in smaller public hospitals, therefore enabling prompt dissemination of laboratory guidelines. Third, the outbreak strain had a unique susceptibility profile that enabled effective screening of A. baumannii strains in hospital laboratories and referral to a central laboratory for confirmatory testing. This laboratory provided immediate feedback (<48 hours after strains were received) to hospitals, which facilitated prompt adaptation of local control measures, and to CCLIN and InVS, which enabled regular tracing of the strain dissemination and adaptation of recommendations.

Two factors make emergence of panresistant isolates through mutations in porins (11) or acquisition of plasmid-encoded carbapenemases (8), such as the [bla.sub.OXA-58] gene (28), a concern. First, there may be no option but to treat patients infected with A. baumannii, particularly in the intensive care setting, because A. baumannii infection is associated with a higher case-fatality ratio in critically ill patients (3,4,29,30). Second, carbapenems were the last molecules active against A. baumannii VEB-1 isolates. Antimicrobial drug susceptibility of A. baumannii VEB-1 isolates remained relatively stable; all tested strains were fully susceptible to carbapenems and all but 1 was susceptible to colistin. The slight variations in their aminoglycoside aminoglycoside /ami·no·gly·co·side/ (-gli´ko-sid) any of a group of antibacterial antibiotics (e.g., streptomycin, gentamicin) derived from various species of Streptomyces  susceptibilities reflected presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 different antimicrobial drug selection pressures in some of the hospitals.

Early warning and investigations of reported cases alerted all hospitals of the need for rapid identification and reporting of cases. Furthermore, early warning enabled timely assistance for implementing effective control measures. These investigations showed that the epidemic clone was already endemic in some hospitals, which suggests that once the strain is introduced into a hospital, eradicating it may be difficult. Early recognition of its presence and prompt implementation of strict infection control measures are therefore necessary to prevent its further spread and establishment of endemicity. Moreover, when several hospitals in the same network are affected by the same clone, coordinated measures must be implemented to effectively reduce its spread, as demonstrated for other multidrug-resistant bacteria multidrug-resistant bacteria Microbiology Bacteria that have acquired antibiotic-resistant genes. See Multidrug resistance.  such as vancomycin-resistant enterococci enterococci

bacteria in the genus Enterococcus.
 (31).

In this national investigation, spread within hospitals was not explored because it has been well described in the literature (3,4,26,27). While we reinforced the implementation of standard and contact precautions in affected hospitals, we recommended that other hospitals be informed (by flagged records) when infected or colonized patients are transferred to them. In some hospitals, fast-spreading clusters associated with deaths led to the closure of intensive care units; however, the effectiveness of such a measure needs further evaluation because transfer of these patients enhances the dissemination of the strain (4). In other hospitals, the prompt and strict application of barrier precautions barrier precautions Infection control A general term referring to any method or device used to ↓ contact with potentially infectious body fluids, including facial masks, doubled gloves and fluid-resistant gowns. See Isolation, Reverse isolation, Universal precautions. , without closure of the intensive care unit, effectively controlled the outbreak.

Clones may emerge at different locations by independent selection of genetically related, circulating strains in the community or environment as a result of antibiotic use in hospitals (2,8,32,33). Otherwise, similar isolates may appear at different locations simply through direct spread from 1 hospital to another. Results of this investigation suggest that regional spread of the organism was mediated by patient transfers within regional healthcare networks. However, the appearance of the organism in hospitals in southern France Southern France (or the South of France), colloquially known as Le Midi, is a loosely defined geographical area consisting of the regions of France that border the Atlantic Ocean south of the Gironde, Spain, the Mediterranean Sea, Italy, and Switzerland south of the , Lyon (central France), and Paris is difficult to explain by simple spread. Although A. baumannii isolates from southern and northern France were found in Lyon, no epidemiologic link could be found, and one cannot be sure that the cases in southern France were acquired from contact with patients or hospitals in northern France. Case reporting and recognition of the outbreak could have been delayed, and the epidemic situation that we observed might be the consequence of a spread that started earlier than 2003, even earlier than the 2001 outbreak in Valenciennes (4). Several facts support this hypothesis: 1) [bla.sub.VEB-1] gene was characterized in 1996 in an E. coli E. coli: see Escherichia coli.
E. coli
 in full Escherichia coli

Species of bacterium that inhabits the stomach and intestines. E. coli can be transmitted by water, milk, food, or flies and other insects.
 strain isolated from a Vietnamese child hospitalized in France (18) and then in 2001 in an A. baumannii strain (16); 2) the 2001 A. baumannii isolates were clonally related, but at least 2 PFGE types had already been observed (4); 3) retrospective surveys recently conducted in a few large university hospitals in southern and northern France showed that A. baumannii VEB-1 isolates were present as early as January 2001 (data not shown). Finally, an alternative explanation could be that the isolates from northern and southern France were introduced separately into the country from an unknown common source.

The origin of this clone remains unknown because A. baumannii VEB-1 isolates have never been reported in other countries. All isolates were epidemiologically related, and most of them were similar enough to be considered as belonging to the same strain. However, the diversity of the total set of isolates was slightly greater than what is usually recovered in single-hospital outbreaks. Clonal diffusion with several pulsotypes has already been observed in the first A. baumannii VEB-1 outbreak described in 2001 (4). That isolates with indistinguishable PFGE profiles were found in many of the hospitals and that all isolates had similar profiles suggest that they could be considered relatively new, compared with older strains circulating in Europe (32). Although the origin of [bla.sub.VEB-1] gene is presumably countries in Southeast Asia, it would be interesting to investigate the occurrence of such strains in these countries. Alternatively, a European A. baumannii strain might have acquired foreign 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.
 containing [bla.sub.VEB-1] through either conjugation conjugation, in genetics
conjugation, in genetics: see recombination.
conjugation, in grammar
conjugation: see inflection.
 or transformation (34). Several multidrug-resistant A. baumannii strains have been found to be widespread in Europe (32,33), and epidemic carbapenem-resistant strains have been reported worldwide (9,35-3 7).

This report used data only from mandatory notifications and isolates received by the central laboratory; the full extent of this clone in France remains unknown. The large media coverage of this outbreak in late December 2003 may have discouraged hospitals from reporting cases; several isolates were actually sent to the central laboratory without being reported. Moreover, because mandatory notification is not patient-based, contact tracing In epidemiology, contact tracing is the identification and diagnosis of persons who may have come into contact with an infected person. For sexually transmitted diseases, this is generally limited to sexual partners but for highly virulent diseases such as Ebola and tuberculosis, a  of each patient could not be systematically performed. Data from notifications (date of first and last case, name of transferring facility for imported cases) enabled us to establish only when an index patient was admitted from a previously affected facility.

Because European countries were informed about this outbreak through the EU Early Warning and Response System Early Warning and Response System is a part of the network for the epidemiological surveillance and control of communicable diseases. The system allows for immediate exchange of views on risk assessment and risk management crucial for timely public health action. , Belgian public health authorities were able to detect early and control a cluster of 3 cases in a nursing home close to the border with France (38). This clone should therefore be considered as an issue affecting hospitals not only in France but also in bordering countries, and this situation underlines the importance of supranational Supranational

An international organization, or union, whereby member states transcend national boundaries
or interests to share in the decision-making and vote on issues pertaining to the wider grouping.
 information exchange for early warning of antimicrobial drug resistance.

Conclusion

The emergence and spread of this strain of VEB-1--producing A. baumannii isolates are worrisome and reflect the magnitude of antimicrobial drug resistance in France. Most of the reported cases occurred in northern France. The weekly number of reported cases dropped substantially after January 2004, which suggests that infection control recommendations were effective. After the alert was stopped in June 2004, only 12 notifications were received by InVS until December 2005; these notifications came from 8 hospitals (5 of them already known) and indicated a total of 17 VEB-1-producing A. baumannii infections. The last notification was received in May 2005, suggesting that the national outbreak was controlled. However, after June 2004 the notification system returned to its baseline setting; i.e., only multidrug-resistant A. baumannii infections were to be reported. Although we are confident that the national alert drastically helped reduce the clinical effect of the outbreak, we cannot rule out that the strain is still spread by colonized patients.

This study emphasizes the importance of an early warning network comprising infection control units and regional (CCLIN, health departments) and central (InVS and expert laboratory) structures. The results underscore the need for anticipating future, emerging antimicrobial drug resistance threats by combining laboratory and epidemiologic expertise. Early detection of emerging resistance mechanisms usefully completes surveillance data, which monitor the level of resistance but may miss the emergence of new phenomena.

Acknowledgments

We thank the members of the microbiology laboratories for sending the strains, infection control teams for reporting cases, and local health departments for their assistance in this investigation.

This work was funded by a grant from the Ministere de l'Education Nationale et de la Recherche La Recherche is a monthly French language popular science magazine covering recent scientific news. It is published by the Société d'éditions scientifiques (the Scientific Publishing Group), a subsidiary of Financière Tallandier.  (UPRES-EA3539), Universite Paris XI, by the Assistance Publique-Hopitaux de Paris, France, and by the European Community European Community: see European Union.
European Community (EC)

Organization formed in 1967 with the merger of the European Economic Community, European Coal and Steel Community, and European Atomic Energy Community.
 (6th PCRD PCRD Postgraduate Centre for Refugee Doctors (UK) , LSHMCT- 2003-503-335).

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 reprinted.

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Surgery on any part of the nervous system.
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(1) This study was presented in part at the 2004 Annual Conference on Antimicrobial Resistance: June 28-30, 2004, Bethesda, Maryland Bethesda is an urbanized, but unincorporated, area in southern Montgomery County, Maryland, just Northwest of Washington, D.C. It takes its name from a church located there, the Bethesda Presbyterian Church, built in 1820 and rebuilt in 1850, which in turn took its name from , USA.

Thierry Naas, * (2) Bruno Coignard, ([dagger])(2) Anne Carbonne ([double dagger double dagger
n.
A reference mark () used in printing and writing. Also called diesis.

Noun 1.
]), Karine Blanckaert, ([double dagger]) Odile Bajolet, ([section]) Claude Bernet, ([paragraph]) Xavier Verdeil, (#) Pascal Astagneau, ([double dagger]) Jean-Claude Desenclos, ([dagger]) and Patrice Nordmann, * on behalf of the French Nosocomial Infection Early Warning, Investigation and Surveillance Network

* Hopital de Bicetre, Le Kremlin-Bicetre, France; ([dagger]) Institut de Veille Sanitaire, Saint-Maurice, France; ([double dagger]) Centre de Coordination de Lutte Centre les Infections Nosocomiales Paris Nord, Paris, France; ([section]) Reseau Bacteries Multi-Resistantes Champagne-Ardennes, Centre Hospitalier et Universitaire, Reims, France; ([paragraph]) Centre de Coordination de Lutte Centre les Infections Nosocomiales Sud-Est, Lyon, France; (#) Centre de Coordination de Lutte Centre les Infections Nosocomiales Sud-Ouest et Centre Hospitalier et Universitaire, Toulouse, France

(2) These authors contributed equally to this work.

Dr Tenover is associate director for laboratory science in the Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. His research interests include mechanisms of antimicrobial drug resistance, in vitro in vitro /in vi·tro/ (in ve´tro) [L.] within a glass; observable in a test tube; in an artificial environment.

in vi·tro
adj.
In an artificial environment outside a living organism.
 susceptibility testing, and bacterial strain typing.

Dr Naas is an associate professor in medical microbiology at the University of Paris XI, South Medical School. His primary research interest is the genetic basis of antimicrobial drug resistance gene acquisition.

Address for correspondence: Thierry Naas, Service de Bacteriologie-Virologie, Hopital de Bicetre, 78 rue du General Leclerc, 94275 K.-Bicetre CEDEX, France; email: thierry.naas@bct.ap-hop-paris.fr
Table 1. VEB-1-producing Acinetobacter baumannii case characteristics
and period of transmission, by district, France, April 2003-May 2004
(N = 290)

                                           Reported cases (n)
                                           ([dagger])
District *             Reporting
                       hospitals
                          (n)      Total   I     C    U

Nord (59)                 19        124    19   60    45
Pas de Calais (62)        14        111    32   55    24
Aisne (02)                 2         2     0     0    2
Ardennes (08)              2        14     6     8    0
Champagne (51)             1        11     2     9    0
Paris (75)                 1         1     1     0    0
Val de Marne (94)          1         1     1     0    0
Yvelines (78)              1         1     0     1    0
Rhene (69)                 4         8     4     4    0
Isere (38)                 1         1     0     1    0
Haute Garonne (31)         1         5     1     2    2
Tarn (81)                  2         2     1     1    0
Hdrault (34)               2         7     5     2    0
Gard (30)                  1         1     1     0    0
Alpes Maritimes (06)       1         1     0     1    0
Total                     53        290    73   144   73

                                  Date of case diagnosis
District *             Reported
                       deaths
                         (N)         First         Last

Nord (59)                 24      22 Apr 2003   13 May 2004
Pas de Calais (62)        7       9 Mar 2003    14 May 2004
Aisne (02)                0       5 Nov 2003    5 Nov 2003
Ardennes (08)             0       15 May 2003   2 Feb 2004
Champagne (51)            1       13 Aug 2003   15 Mar 2004
Paris (75)                0       31 Jan 2004   31 Jan 2004
Val de Marne (94)         0       3 May 2004    3 May 2004
Yvelines (78)             0       8 Mar 2004    8 Mar 2004
Rhene (69)                0       13 Aug 2003   7 Feb 2004
Isere (38)                0       2 Dec 2003    2 Dec 2003
Haute Garonne (31)        1       16 Sep 2003   15 Apr 2004
Tarn (81)                 0       28 Oct 2003   5 Jan 2004
Herault (34)              1       21 Oct 2003   9 Apr 2004
Gard (30)                 0       10 Apr 2003   10 Apr 2004
Alpes Maritimes (06)      0       3 Jan 2004    3 Jan 2004
Total                     34      22 Apr 2003   14 May 2004

* Districts are listed from north to south and west to east; numbers
are those used in Figure 2 to identify districts.

([dagger]) I, infected; C, colonized; U, unknown.

Table 2. Recommendations for hospitals * ([dagger])

Type                Recommendation

Notification        Report any case of infection or colonization with
                    Acinetobacter baumannii strain showing resistance
                    profile similar to that of 2001 outbreak strain
                    (16) to CCLIN and local health department; attach
                    copy of antibiogram.

Laboratory          Establish identification criteria based on
guidelines          antibiogram

                    Store strains and contact central laboratory for
                    microbiologic investigation

Medical wards       Inform all medical teams and paramedics of presence
                    of bacterial strain

                    Ensure appropriate use of antimicrobial drugs in
                    high-risk wards

Infection control   Set up systematic screening of patients in
team                high-risk wards

                    Reinforce isolation protocols and standard hygiene
                    precautions throughout hospital

                    Reinforce surface cleaning procedures in wards
                    where infected or colonized patients have been

Patient transfer    Limit internal and external patient transfers

                    Inform receiving hospitals of status of patients
                    colonized or infected with ESBL-producing A.
                    baumannii

* CCLIN, regional infection control coordinating centers; ESBL,
extended-spectrum [beta]-lactamase.

([dagger]) At the national level, recommendations were disseminated by
the National Institute of Public Health (Institut de Veille Sanitaire)
and the French Nosocomial Infection Early Warning, Investigation and
Surveillance Network (Reseau d'Alerte, d'Investigation et de
Surveillance des Infections Nosocomiales) through its website
(http://www.invs.sante.fr/raisin, "alerte" section). At the regional
level, they were disseminated to all hospital laboratories and
infection control units by CCLIN through email notifications and their
respective websites. In each hospital, they were implemented in the
wards by infection control units assisted by CCLIN, when necessary.
COPYRIGHT 2006 U.S. National Center for Infectious Diseases
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Title Annotation:RESEARCH; includes statistical tables
Author:Nordmann, Patrice
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Geographic Code:4EUFR
Date:Aug 1, 2006
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