Abstract

Acinetobacter baumannii (ABA) is an important opportunistic pathogen associated with high mortality rates in intensive care units (ICUs). An outbreak in the ICU of a secondary-level hospital in Quito, Ecuador, occurred during April and May 2015 and was successfully controlled. Enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus polymerase chain reaction (ERIC-PCR) and repetitive element palindromic (REP)-PCR was conducted on all isolates recovered from patients, as well as environmental samples, to confirm the presence of an outbreak. A case-control study was conducted by comparing the clinical histories of the affected patients and of control patients present in the ICU during the outbreak period who did not present a positive culture for ABA. Five patients were infected and two were colonized with the same clonal strain of ABA, which was also identified on the stethoscope and a monitor associated with an isolation room. Statistical analysis of case histories did not identify any additional risk factors, but the outbreak was initiated by one patient in the isolation room of the ICU who was infected with the outbreak strain. All patients who ocupied that room after the index case tested positive for at least one culture of ABA. The outbreak strain was found on the stethoscope, and a subclone was found on the monitor of that room. Having access to basic equipment will enable well-trained professionals to rapidly detect and initiate the control process of an outbreak, saving lives and money spent on nosocomial infection treatments.

Highlights

  • Acinetobacter baumannii (ABA) is an important opportunistic pathogen associated with high mortality rates in intensive care units (ICUs)

  • The common factor in all infected or colonized patients was that all had been in the isolation room of the ICU where the outbreak strain was isolated from the room’s stethoscope

  • Microbiological study Forty-two environmental samples were collected, and the results showed that one ABA strain with the same phenotype was found on a monitor, stethoscope, and mattress

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Summary

Introduction

Acinetobacter baumannii (ABA) is an important opportunistic pathogen associated with high mortality rates in intensive care units (ICUs). Results: Five patients were infected and two were colonized with the same clonal strain of ABA, which was identified on the stethoscope and a monitor associated with an isolation room. Statistical analysis of case histories did not identify any additional risk factors, but the outbreak was initiated by one patient in the isolation room of the ICU who was infected with the outbreak strain. Because ABA is a major opportunistic pathogen pervasive in the environment, it constitutes a leading cause of cross-contamination and infections, multidrug-resistant (MDR) infections associated with high mortality rates in intensive care units (ICUs) [3,6,7]. The aim of this study was to characterize an outbreak of ABA in a hospital in Quito, Ecuador, and to localize the environmental reservoirs and possible risk factors associated with the infections The situation of MDR ABA is of particular concern in developing countries, such as Ecuador, where the conditions and policies of hospitals are not always up to date, leading to increases in the risk of nosocomial infections [8].

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