Clonal spread of Acinetobacter baumannii in a general intensive care unit.

Ann Ig

Department of Experimental Medicine and Biochemical Science, Section of Infectious Diseases, University of Perugia, Italy.

Published: February 2005

The epidemiological characterization of multiply resistant Acinetobacter baumannii isolates from a six-bed Intensive Care Unit (ICU) is described. Investigations for A. baumannii were performed in three subsequent surveillance studies. In the first study, surveillance cultures were taken from patients, health care personnel and the environment; in the second study surveillance cultures were taken at 0, 4, and 7 days from all patients admitted consecutively to the ward; and in the third study surveillance cultures were taken from patients, health care personnel and the environment. During the first study all four hospitalized patients were found to harbour A. baumannii. Hand cultures did not grow any A. baumannii when staff entered the ward from home, but 7 positive health care workers were identified out of 25 samples taken during work, and two cultures of environmental specimens grew A. baumannii. During the second study, 4 of 86 (4.6%) patients resulted colonized with A. baumannii. In the third epidemiological study, no A. baumannii was cultured from either patients, health care personnel or the environment. All isolates recovered from various patients or sources produced conserved macrorestriction Pulsed-Field Gel Electrophoresis (PFGE) patterns and showed the same antibiotic resistance; therefore, they can be considered indistinguishable. The same antibiotic resistance and macrorestriction patterns were observed in previously isolated A. baumannii strains in the ward during May 1997, suggesting the persistence of a single A. baumannii in the ICU. The present study confirms that molecular typing is an essential tool in the epidemiology and control of nosocomial infections, showing here the persistence of a single A. baumannii clone in the ICU. The origin of this strain remains unknown but, when basic infection control measures were reinforced, emphasizing the importance of hand antisepsis and judicious use of gloves, control of A. baumannii spread in the ward was achieved.

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