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| | | ![]() Study Examines ICU Outbreak of Staph Aureus With Resistance to Methicillin, Linezolid CHICAGO -- June 8, 2010 -- An outbreak of infection due to linezolid and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (LRSA) in 12 intensive care unit (ICU) patients in Spain was associated with transmission within the hospital and extensive usage of linezolid, with reductions in linezolid use and infection-control measures associated with resolution of the outbreak, according to a study published in the June 9 issue of JAMA. Miguel Sanchez Garcia, MD, Hospital Clinico San Carlos, and Universidad Complutense, Madrid, Spain, and colleagues examined an outbreak of LRSA and the infection-control measures that were applied. The study included critically ill patients colonised and/or infected with LRSA at an intensive care department of a 1,000-bed tertiary care university teaching hospital in Madrid, Spain. Patients were placed under strict contact isolation. Daily updates of outbreak data and recommendations for the use of linezolid were issued. Extensive environmental sampling and screening of the hands of health care workers were performed. Between April 13 and June 26, 2008, 12 patients with LRSA were identified. In 6 patients, LRSA caused ventilator-associated pneumonia and in 3 patients it caused bacteremia. Linezolid resistance linked to the gene CFR was demonstrated in all isolates. "Potential hospital staff carriers and environmental samples were negative except for one," the authors wrote. "Six patients died, 5 of them in the intensive care unit, with 1 death attributed to LRSA infection. Linezolid use decreased from 202 defined daily doses in April 2008 to 25 defined daily doses in July 2008. Between July 2008 and April 2010, no new cases have been identified in the weekly surveillance cultures or diagnostic samples." "The outbreak involving 12 patients in the ICU is the first, to our knowledge, with LRSA to be reported, and the first with CFR gene-mediated linezolid resistance," they wrote. "The apparent risk factor is prior administration of linezolid." "In view of the current increase of community-acquired MRSA infections, our data have important implications for both hospitalised patients and outpatients," the authors concluded. "Combination therapy with [the antibiotics] rifampin and fusidic acid still needs to be evaluated in the clinical setting." In an accompanying editorial, Robert P. Gaynes, MD, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta VA Medical Center, Atlanta, Georgia, wrote that there is a need for controls over antibiotic use: "Efforts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to reinvigorate national surveillance of antibiotic use through the National Healthcare Safety Network are under way. In the United States, mandatory and public reporting of health care-associated infection rates has generated considerable interest and some controversy. Developing measures for appropriate antibiotic use will occur soon and will likely become public. Some measures may become mandatory, similar to time to first antibiotic dose for community-acquired pneumonia. The goal should be to ensure that additional quality measures will improve patient outcomes without unintended consequences. To be sure, quality measures of antibiotic use are necessary and of critical importance. Increasing antibiotic resistance is a problem largely because of indiscriminate antibiotic use. Every clinician must do a better job to preserve the effectiveness of these essential therapies." SOURCE: JAMA
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