Rationale & Objective: Contaminated water and other fluids are increasingly recognized to be associated with health care-associated infections. We investigated an outbreak of Gram-negative bloodstream infections at 3 outpatient hemodialysis facilities.

Study Design: Matched case-control investigations.

Setting & Participants: Patients who received hemodialysis at Facility A, B, or C from July 2015 to November 2016.

Exposures: Infection control practices, sources of water, dialyzer reuse, injection medication handling, dialysis circuit priming, water and dialysate test findings, environmental reservoirs such as wall boxes, vascular access care practices, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, and whole-genome sequencing of bacterial isolates.

Outcomes: Cases were defined by a positive blood culture for any Gram-negative bacteria drawn July 1, 2015 to November 30, 2016 from a patient who had received hemodialysis at Facility A, B, or C.

Analytical Approach: Exposures in cases and controls were compared using matched univariate conditional logistic regression.

Results: 58 cases of Gram-negative bloodstream infection occurred; 48 (83%) required hospitalization. The predominant organisms were Serratia marcescens (n=21) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (n=12). Compared with controls, cases had higher odds of using a central venous catheter for dialysis (matched odds ratio, 54.32; lower bound of the 95% CI, 12.19). Facility staff reported pooling and regurgitation of waste fluid at recessed wall boxes that house connections for dialysate components and the effluent drain within dialysis treatment stations. Environmental samples yielded S marcescens and P aeruginosa from wall boxes. S marcescens isolated from wall boxes and case-patients from the same facilities were closely related by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and whole-genome sequencing. We identified opportunities for health care workers' hands to contaminate central venous catheters with contaminated fluid from the wall boxes.

Limitations: Limited patient isolates for testing, on-site investigation occurred after peak of infections.

Conclusions: This large outbreak was linked to wall boxes, a previously undescribed source of contaminated fluid and biofilms in the immediate patient care environment.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10826890PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1053/j.ajkd.2019.05.012DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

wall boxes
16
gram-negative bloodstream
12
outbreak gram-negative
8
bloodstream infections
8
received hemodialysis
8
hemodialysis facility
8
july 2015
8
pulsed-field gel
8
gel electrophoresis
8
electrophoresis whole-genome
8

Similar Publications

Structural basis of a microbial trimethylamine transporter.

mBio

January 2025

MOE Key Laboratory of Evolution and Marine Biodiversity, Frontiers Science Center for Deep Ocean Multispheres and Earth System & College of Marine Life Sciences, Ocean University of China, Qingdao, China.

Article Synopsis
  • Trimethylamine (TMA) is a naturally occurring compound found in the human gut and various ecosystems, and while it’s linked to cardiovascular issues in humans, many microbes use it as a nutrient source.
  • The TMA transporter, TmaT, was identified from a marine bacterium and is characterized as an Na/TMA symporter with high specificity for TMA, forming a homotrimer structure with a transport channel made of 12 transmembrane helices.
  • Using cryo-electron microscopy, the study reveals the structural details of TmaT and proposes a mechanism for how TMA is transported across cell membranes, providing new insights into TMA transport in biological systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Characterization of FchAGL9 and FchSHP, two MADS-boxes related to softening of Fragaria chiloensis fruit.

Plant Physiol Biochem

October 2024

Laboratorio de Fisiología Vegetal y Genética Molecular, Instituto de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad de Talca, Avenida Lircay s/n, Talca, Chile. Electronic address:

Fragaria chiloensis is a Chilean native species that softens intensively during its ripening. Its softening is related to cell wall disassembly due to the participation of cell wall degrading enzymes. Softening of F.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Wetting and emergence of long-range couplings in arrays of fluid cells.

Phys Rev E

May 2024

Institut für Theoretische Physik, Universität Innsbruck, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria.

Critical wetting is of crucial importance for the phase behavior of a simple fluid or Ising magnet confined between walls that exert opposing surface fields so that one wall favors liquid (spin up), while the other favors gas (spin down). We show that arrays of boxes filled with fluid and linked by channels with appropriately chosen opposing walls can exhibit long-range cooperative effects on a length scale far exceeding the bulk correlation length. We give the theoretical foundations of these long-range couplings by using a lattice gas (Ising model) description of a system.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Biochar reduces antibiotic transport by altering soil hydrology and enhancing antibiotic sorption.

J Hazard Mater

July 2024

Zhejiang Honggaitou Agricultural Science and Technology Co., Ltd, Quzhou 324109, China.

The performance of biochar (BC) in reducing the transport of antibiotics under field conditions has not been sufficiently explored. In repacked sloping boxes of a calcareous soil, the effects of different BC treatments on the discharge of three relatively weakly sorbing antibiotics (sulfadiazine, sulfamethazine, and florfenicol) via runoff and drainage were monitored for three natural rain events. Surface application of 1 % BC (1 %BC-SA) led to the most effective reduction in runoff discharge of the two sulfonamide antibiotics, which can be partly ascribed to the enhanced water infiltration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In patients at high risk for ischemic stroke, clinical carotid ultrasound is often used to grade stenosis, determine plaque burden and assess stroke risk. Analysis currently requires a trained sonographer to manually identify vessel and plaque regions, which is time and labor intensive. We present a method for automatically determining bounding boxes and lumen segmentation using a Mask R-CNN network trained on sonographer assisted ground-truth carotid lumen segmentations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!