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Mycobacteroides abscessus outbreak and mitigation in a cardiothoracic transplant population: the problem with tap water. | LitMetric

Mycobacteroides abscessus outbreak and mitigation in a cardiothoracic transplant population: the problem with tap water.

J Hosp Infect

Department of Healthcare Epidemiology and Infection Prevention, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL, USA; Division of Infectious Diseases, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.

Published: November 2024

Background: Hospital outbreaks caused by Mycobacteroides abscessus complex are a major cause for concern in vulnerable patients such as the cardiothoracic transplant population.

Aim: To describe the outbreak investigation and mitigation steps undertaken to address an increase in healthcare-associated M. abscessus complex cases in an inpatient cardiothoracic transplant population.

Methods: We extracted clinical characteristics from patients with M. abscessus pre-outbreak (March 2018 to December 2020) and during the outbreak (January 2021 to June 2022) from the electronic medical record. A multi-disciplinary team conducted the outbreak investigation and devised a mitigation strategy to implement at our institution.

Findings: The baseline incidence of healthcare-associated M. abscessus was 0.11 cases per 10,000 patient-days; this increased to 0.24 cases per 10,000 patient-days during the outbreak. There were 1/9 (11%) cardiothoracic transplant patients in the pre-outbreak group compared with 7/12 (58%) during the outbreak, and respiratory specimen types compromised 6/9 (67%) of M. abscessus results in the pre-outbreak group compared with 10/12 (83%) during the outbreak. Among the clinical care activities involving water, a variety of water sources were utilized, including filtered and tap water. The incidence of healthcare-associated M. abscessus subsequently decreased to 0.06 cases per 10,000 patient-days after implementing an outbreak-mitigation strategy of sterile water precautions.

Conclusions: Robust educational efforts from a multi-disciplinary team on eliminating exposure to tap water were effective measures to reduce healthcare-associated M. abscessus incidence at our institution. Non-tuberculous mycobacteria infection surveillance, targeted education, and water mitigation strategies may be beneficial preventative strategies for other lung transplant centres facing similar issues.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhin.2024.10.016DOI Listing

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