Transcript Slide 1

Targeting Virus but Killing Bacteria: Impact of Alcohol-Based Hand Rub on the Incidence
of Multi-resistant Bacteria during Influenza H1N1 Outbreak
P - 268
Denusa Wiltgen, Ariane Monteiro, Lisiane R. Martins, Raquel Cechinel, Angélica P. do Amaral, Daniela S. Branco, Michele Metz, Francine Lopes, Ricardo A. Zimerman, Soraya M. Colares,
Alessandro C. Pasqualotto, Ivana G. Rocha, Teresa C. T. Sukiennik
Infection Control Department, Irmandade da Santa Casa de Misericórdia de Porto Alegre, Porto Alegre, Brazil
Aims
Abstract
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Methods
• Observational retrospective study
r= - 0.79
p = 0.007
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•1,200-bed university hospital
• Detected epidemy of H1N1 in July 2009
• Period of study: January to October 2009
•Period 1 (January - June): before outbreak of H1N1
•Period 2 (July - October): after outbreak of H1N1
• Consumption of alcohol-based formulations:
•Volume (ml) per 1,000 patient-days
•Multi-resistent definition: proved resistance in 3 different
classes of antimicrobials
• Statistical analyses were performed with SPSS software
version 14.0. p <0.05
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MDR
Background: The recent H1N1 outbreak imposed a major
challenge to infection control experts. As a consequence, hand
hygiene with alcohol-based solutions has been reinforced, since this
intervention is known to reduce the transmission of several
infections, particularly in the health care setting. Even though hand
hygiene is the most important factor to reduce cross-transmission of
nosocomial infections, adhesion to these practices has been poor
worldwide.
Objectives: The purpose of this study was to report the impact of
increased consumption of alcohol formulations for hand hygiene
during an H1N1 outbreak on the incidence of multi-resistant bacteria
in a tertiary hospital in Southern Brazil.
Methods: A retrospective audit was performed to correlate the
consumption of alcohol formulations from January 2009 to October
2009 with the incidence of multi-resistant bacteria recovered from
clinical samples. The study was performed in a single 1,200-bed
university hospital. The H1N1 outbreak started in July 2009. The
study comprised two distinct periods, before (Period I; JanuaryJune) and after (Period II; July-October) the onset of the epidemy.
The consumption of alcohol-based formulations was measured in
terms of volume per 1,000 patient-days. Only one distinct isolate
was considered per patient. Statistical analyses were performed with
SPSS software version 14.0. P values were considered statistically
significant if <0.05.
Results: During the period of study, 612 multi-resistant bacterial
isolates were recovered from clinical samples. Mean number of
multi-resistant isolates was 122.5 and 91.7 during Periods I and II,
respectively (p=0.23). Alcohol consumption increased from 9.6
ml/1,000 patient-days (Period I) to 22.3 ml/1,000 patient-days
(Period II) (p=0.047). There was a negative and significant
correlation between alcohol consumption and the prevalence of
multi-resistant bacteria during periods I and II (r= –0.79; p=0.007).
Conclusions: The novel H1N1 infection put health care providers at
risk for the acquisition of a potentially serious infection. We suspect
that this might have influenced adherence to hand disinfection
practices, which in turn resulted in a higher consumption of alcoholbased hand rub and a lower incidence of multi-resistant bacteria.
-The purpose of this study was to report the impact of
increased consumption of alcohol formulations for hand
hygiene during an H1N1 outbreak on the incidence of multiresistant bacteria in a tertiary hospital in Southern Brazil.
Figure 1: Correlation of Alcohol-Based Hand Rub and
Incidence of Multi-Resistant Bacteria during Influenza H1N1
outbreak
2
0
-2
10
20
30
40
50
alcohol formulation (ml) per 1000 patient-days
Results
• (r= –0.79; p=0.007)
Period I
N of total
Isolates
Period II
p
612 ( Pseudomonas sp, Acinetobacter sp, ESBL
enterobacteriacea, MRSA)
Isolates (mean
value)
122
92
0.23
Alcohol-based
hand rub
consumption
9.6 ml/ 1000
pct/day
22.3 ml/1000
pct/day
0.047
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Conclusions
The novel H1N1 infection put health care
providers at risk for the acquisition of a potentially
serious infection. We suspect that this might have
influenced adherence to hand disinfection practices,
which in turn resulted in a higher consumption of
alcohol-based hand rub and a lower incidence of
Printed by
multi-resistant bacteria