Abstract

In recent years, nosocomial infection, including that by multiple-drug-resistant Acinetobacter (MDRA), has become an increasing concern in Japan. Typically, Acinetobacter inhabits soil and river water and is usually harmless to humans. However, bacteria of this genus can become pathogens in inpatients with weakened immune systems, resulting in opportunistic infection. Currently, hospital infection by MDRA is spreading not only in Japan, but also worldwide. This is a very serious problem, and little is known about effective countermeasures. The present study sought to examine the microbiome status in a hospital visitor waiting room as a first step in establishing countermeasures for use against Acinetobacter. Specifically, we performed a so-called metagenomic analysis to directly analyze DNA collected from the environment, without an intervening cultivation step. Indoor airborne bacteria and surface bacteria were sampled and analyzed. The results show that in a visitor waiting room, the top-ten most-abundant genera included (in decreasing order) Acinetobacter, Streptococcus, Prevotella, Pseudomonas, Bifidobacterium, Fusobacterium, Neisseia, Porphyromonas, Leptotrichia, and Haemophilus. Thus, Acinetobacter constituted the mostdetected genus and was present in all collected samples. Furthermore, we assessed the bactericidal effect of ultraviolet C (UVC) against Acinetobacter sp. 7206, a hospital isolate. A UVC dose of 4.0 sec•mW/cm2 was required to kill the 99.9% Acinetobacter sp. 7206 on solid culture medium.

Highlights

  • In recent years, nosocomial infection, including that by multiple-drug-resistant Acinetobacter (MDRA), has become an increasing concern in Japan

  • Four of these 15 inpatients died during their hospitalizations, and three of these four mortalities were attributed to MDRA

  • It was found that many pathogens were detected in a hospital waiting room

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Summary

Introduction

Nosocomial infection, including that by multiple-drug-resistant Acinetobacter (MDRA), has become an increasing concern in Japan. MDRA and similar bacteria were detected in 15 patients in the Kagoshima University Hospital ICU (intensive care unit) in the summer of 2018. Four of these 15 inpatients died during their hospitalizations, and three of these four mortalities were attributed to MDRA. Members of the genus Acinetobacter inhabit soil and river water and are usually harmless to humans. These bacteria can become pathogens in inpatients with weakened immune systems, resulting in opportunistic infection. Antibiotics that are typically used for the medical treatment of Acinetobacter infection have reduced efficacy against drug-resistant

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