BackgroundTimely identification of patients likely to harbor carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) can help health care facilities provide effective infection control and treatment. We evaluated whether a model utilizing prior health care information from a state hospital discharge database could predict a patient’s probability of CRE colonization at the time of hospital admission.MethodsWe performed a case–control study using the Illinois hospital discharge database. From a 2014–2015 patient cohort, we defined cases as index adult patient hospital encounters with a positive CRE culture collected within the first 3 days of hospitalization, as reported to the Illinois XDRO registry; controls were all patient admissions from the same hospital and month. We split the data into training (~60%) and validation (~40%) sets and developed a logistic regression model to estimate coefficients for predictors of interest.ResultsWe identified 486 index cases and 340 005 controls. Independent risk factors for CRE at the time of admission were age, number of short-term acute care hospital (STACH) hospitalizations in the prior 365 days, mean STACH length of stay, number of long-term acute care hospital (LTACH) hospitalizations in the prior 365 days, mean LTACH length of stay, current admission to LTACH, and prior hospital admission with an infection diagnosis code. When applying the model to the validation data set, the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.84.ConclusionsA prediction model utilizing prior health care exposure information could discriminate patients who were likely to harbor CRE at the time of hospital admission.