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Use of the Extensively Drug-resistant Organism (XDRO) Registry for Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) Reporting and Initiation of Transmission Precautions — Chicago, Illinois, 2016

Filetype[PDF-144.99 KB]



Details:

  • Alternative Title:
    Open Forum Infect Dis
  • Description:
    Background

    Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) are a group of multidrug-resistant bacteria that cause ~9,000 infections annually; ~50% of CRE bloodstream infections are fatal. The use of contact precautions (CP) for CRE patients can prevent transmission. To improve CRE surveillance and interfacility communication about positive patients, Illinois implemented the extensively drug-resistant organism (XDRO) registry in 2013. Healthcare facilities must report a patient’s first positive CRE culture per stay ≤7 days from culture confirmation. Facilities can query the registry at patient admission to identify CRE status and implement transmission precautions. We assessed facility timeliness of reporting and querying frequency and registry usefulness in identifying patients who should be on CP.

    Methods

    We analyzed Chicago XDRO data for November 2013–October 2016. Variables were facility type (hospital, long-term acute care hospital [LTACH], and skilled nursing facility [SNF]), culture date, and report date. Timeliness was time from culture collection to reporting. Nine facilities (2 hospitals, 4 LTACHs and 3 SNFs) completed a survey on querying frequency; all but 1 LTACH provided single day census and contact precaution lists. We compared these with the XDRO registry to identify CRE patients for whom querying would have initiated CP use.

    Results

    Chicago facilities reported 2,469 CRE cases. Median timeliness varied by facility type (hospitals: 8 days; SNF: 10 days; and LTACH: 55 days). Of patients on CP for CRE but not reported to the registry, 11/12 (92%) were in LTACHs. Reported querying frequency was daily for 1 hospital and rarely for other facilities. Overall, 91 patients at 8 facilities were in the registry; of these, 0/1 (0%) hospital, 3/27 (11%) LTACH, and 28/63 (44%) SNF patients were not on CP.

    Conclusion

    Timeliness of reporting CRE patients to the XDRO registry varied by facility type and exceeded the 7-day timeframe. Routine registry querying can identify CRE patients who should be on CP. Querying was uncommon in surveyed facilities, identifying an opportunity to improve transmission precautions among CRE patients, particularly in SNFs. We recommend facilities report cases in a timely manner and query the registry at patient admission.

    Disclosures

    M. Y. Lin, CareFusion Foundation: Grant Investigator, Research grant

  • Subjects:
  • Pubmed Central ID:
    PMC5632277
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