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1.
Infect Dis Health ; 28(3): 151-158, 2023 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36803829

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Vancomycin resistant enterococci (VRE) have become endemic pathogens in many Australian hospitals causing significant morbidity. There are few observational studies that have evaluated the effect of antibiotic usage on VRE acquisition. This study examined VRE acquisition and its association with antimicrobial use. The setting was a NSW tertiary hospital with 800 beds over a 63 month period up to March 2020, straddling piperacillin-tazobactam (PT) shortages that occurred from in September 2017. METHODS: The primary outcome was monthly inpatient hospital onset Vancomycin-resistant Enterococci (VRE) acquisitions. Multivariate adaptive regression splines (MARS) were used to estimate hypothetical thresholds, where antimicrobial use above threshold is associated with increased incidence of hospital onset VRE acquisition. Specific antimicrobials and categorised usage (broad, less broad and narrow spectrum) were modelled. RESULTS: There were 846 hospital onset VRE detections over the study period. Hospital onset vanB and vanA VRE acquisitions fell significantly by 64% and 36% respectively after the PT shortage. MARS modelling indicated that PT usage was the only antibiotic found to exhibit a meaningful threshold. PT usage greater than 17.4 defined daily doses/1000 occupied bed-days (95%C I: 13.4, 20.5) was associated with higher onset of hospital VRE. CONCLUSIONS: This paper highlights the large, sustained impact that reduced broad spectrum antimicrobial use had on VRE acquisition and showed that PT use in particular was a major driver with a relatively low threshold. It raises the question as to whether hospitals should be determining local antimicrobial usage targets based on direct evidence from local data analysed with non-linear methods.


Subject(s)
Anti-Infective Agents , Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococci , Humans , Time Factors , Australia , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Tertiary Care Centers , Piperacillin, Tazobactam Drug Combination
2.
Epidemiol Infect ; 137(3): 367-74, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18559128

ABSTRACT

A multi-state outbreak of Salmonella enterica serovar Saintpaul infection occurred in Australia during October 2006. A case-control study conducted in three affected jurisdictions, New South Wales, Victoria and Australian Capital Territory, included 36 cases with the outbreak-specific strain of S. Saintpaul identified by multiple locus variable-number tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) in a faecal specimen and 106 controls. Consumption of cantaloupe (rockmelon) was strongly associated with illness (adjusted OR 23.9 95%, 95% CI 5.1-112.4). S. Saintpaul, with the outbreak MLVA profile, was detected on the skin of two cantaloupes obtained from an implicated retailer. Trace-back investigations did not identify the specific source of the outbreak strain of S. Saintpaul, but multiple Salmonella spp. were detected in environmental samples from farms and packing plants investigated during the trace-back operation. Cantaloupe production and processing practices pose a potential public health threat requiring regulatory and community educational interventions.


Subject(s)
Cucumis melo/microbiology , Disease Outbreaks , Food Microbiology , Salmonella Food Poisoning/epidemiology , Australian Capital Territory/epidemiology , Case-Control Studies , Chi-Square Distribution , Female , Food Contamination , Food Handling , Humans , Logistic Models , Male , New South Wales/epidemiology , Victoria/epidemiology
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