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Reducing healthcare-associated infections incidence by a probiotic-based sanitation system: A multicentre, prospective, intervention study

Healthcare Associated Infections (HAI) are a global concern, further threatened by the increasing drug resistance of HAI-associated pathogens. On the other hand, persistent contamination of hospital surfaces contributes to HAI transmission, and it is not efficiently controlled by conventional cleani...

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Autores principales: Caselli, Elisabetta, Brusaferro, Silvio, Coccagna, Maddalena, Arnoldo, Luca, Berloco, Filippo, Antonioli, Paola, Tarricone, Rosanna, Pelissero, Gabriele, Nola, Silvano, La Fauci, Vincenza, Conte, Alessandro, Tognon, Lorenzo, Villone, Giovanni, Trua, Nelso, Mazzacane, Sante
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6042698/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30001345
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0199616
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author Caselli, Elisabetta
Brusaferro, Silvio
Coccagna, Maddalena
Arnoldo, Luca
Berloco, Filippo
Antonioli, Paola
Tarricone, Rosanna
Pelissero, Gabriele
Nola, Silvano
La Fauci, Vincenza
Conte, Alessandro
Tognon, Lorenzo
Villone, Giovanni
Trua, Nelso
Mazzacane, Sante
author_facet Caselli, Elisabetta
Brusaferro, Silvio
Coccagna, Maddalena
Arnoldo, Luca
Berloco, Filippo
Antonioli, Paola
Tarricone, Rosanna
Pelissero, Gabriele
Nola, Silvano
La Fauci, Vincenza
Conte, Alessandro
Tognon, Lorenzo
Villone, Giovanni
Trua, Nelso
Mazzacane, Sante
author_sort Caselli, Elisabetta
collection PubMed
description Healthcare Associated Infections (HAI) are a global concern, further threatened by the increasing drug resistance of HAI-associated pathogens. On the other hand, persistent contamination of hospital surfaces contributes to HAI transmission, and it is not efficiently controlled by conventional cleaning, which does not prevent recontamination, has a high environmental impact and can favour selection of drug-resistant microbial strains. In the search for effective approaches, an eco-sustainable probiotic-based cleaning system (Probiotic Cleaning Hygiene System, PCHS) was recently shown to stably abate surface pathogens, without selecting antibiotic-resistant species. The aim of this study was to determine whether PCHS application could impact on HAI incidence. A multicentre, pre-post interventional study was performed for 18 months in the Internal Medicine wards of six Italian public hospitals (January 1(st) 2016—June 30(th) 2017). The intervention consisted of the substitution of conventional sanitation with PCHS, maintaining unaltered any other procedure influencing HAI control. HAI incidence in the pre and post-intervention period was the main outcome measure. Surface bioburden was also analyzed in parallel. Globally, 11,842 patients and 24,875 environmental samples were surveyed. PCHS was associated with a significant decrease of HAI cumulative incidence from a global 4.8% (284 patients with HAI over 5,930 total patients) to 2.3% (128 patients with HAI over 5,531 total patients) (OR = 0.44, CI 95% 0.35–0.54) (P<0.0001). Concurrently, PCHS was associated with a stable decrease of surface pathogens, compared to conventional sanitation (mean decrease 83%, range 70–96.3%), accompanied by a concurrent up to 2 Log drop of surface microbiota drug-resistance genes (P<0.0001; P(c) = 0.008). Our study provides findings which support the impact of a sanitation procedure on HAI incidence, showing that the use of a probiotic-based environmental intervention can be associated with a significant decrease of the risk to contract a HAI during hospitalization. Once confirmed in larger experiences and other target populations, this eco-sustainable approach might be considered as a part of infection control and prevention (IPC) strategies. Trial registration—ISRCTN International Clinical Trials Registry, ISRCTN58986947.
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spelling pubmed-60426982018-07-19 Reducing healthcare-associated infections incidence by a probiotic-based sanitation system: A multicentre, prospective, intervention study Caselli, Elisabetta Brusaferro, Silvio Coccagna, Maddalena Arnoldo, Luca Berloco, Filippo Antonioli, Paola Tarricone, Rosanna Pelissero, Gabriele Nola, Silvano La Fauci, Vincenza Conte, Alessandro Tognon, Lorenzo Villone, Giovanni Trua, Nelso Mazzacane, Sante PLoS One Research Article Healthcare Associated Infections (HAI) are a global concern, further threatened by the increasing drug resistance of HAI-associated pathogens. On the other hand, persistent contamination of hospital surfaces contributes to HAI transmission, and it is not efficiently controlled by conventional cleaning, which does not prevent recontamination, has a high environmental impact and can favour selection of drug-resistant microbial strains. In the search for effective approaches, an eco-sustainable probiotic-based cleaning system (Probiotic Cleaning Hygiene System, PCHS) was recently shown to stably abate surface pathogens, without selecting antibiotic-resistant species. The aim of this study was to determine whether PCHS application could impact on HAI incidence. A multicentre, pre-post interventional study was performed for 18 months in the Internal Medicine wards of six Italian public hospitals (January 1(st) 2016—June 30(th) 2017). The intervention consisted of the substitution of conventional sanitation with PCHS, maintaining unaltered any other procedure influencing HAI control. HAI incidence in the pre and post-intervention period was the main outcome measure. Surface bioburden was also analyzed in parallel. Globally, 11,842 patients and 24,875 environmental samples were surveyed. PCHS was associated with a significant decrease of HAI cumulative incidence from a global 4.8% (284 patients with HAI over 5,930 total patients) to 2.3% (128 patients with HAI over 5,531 total patients) (OR = 0.44, CI 95% 0.35–0.54) (P<0.0001). Concurrently, PCHS was associated with a stable decrease of surface pathogens, compared to conventional sanitation (mean decrease 83%, range 70–96.3%), accompanied by a concurrent up to 2 Log drop of surface microbiota drug-resistance genes (P<0.0001; P(c) = 0.008). Our study provides findings which support the impact of a sanitation procedure on HAI incidence, showing that the use of a probiotic-based environmental intervention can be associated with a significant decrease of the risk to contract a HAI during hospitalization. Once confirmed in larger experiences and other target populations, this eco-sustainable approach might be considered as a part of infection control and prevention (IPC) strategies. Trial registration—ISRCTN International Clinical Trials Registry, ISRCTN58986947. Public Library of Science 2018-07-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6042698/ /pubmed/30001345 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0199616 Text en © 2018 Caselli et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Caselli, Elisabetta
Brusaferro, Silvio
Coccagna, Maddalena
Arnoldo, Luca
Berloco, Filippo
Antonioli, Paola
Tarricone, Rosanna
Pelissero, Gabriele
Nola, Silvano
La Fauci, Vincenza
Conte, Alessandro
Tognon, Lorenzo
Villone, Giovanni
Trua, Nelso
Mazzacane, Sante
Reducing healthcare-associated infections incidence by a probiotic-based sanitation system: A multicentre, prospective, intervention study
title Reducing healthcare-associated infections incidence by a probiotic-based sanitation system: A multicentre, prospective, intervention study
title_full Reducing healthcare-associated infections incidence by a probiotic-based sanitation system: A multicentre, prospective, intervention study
title_fullStr Reducing healthcare-associated infections incidence by a probiotic-based sanitation system: A multicentre, prospective, intervention study
title_full_unstemmed Reducing healthcare-associated infections incidence by a probiotic-based sanitation system: A multicentre, prospective, intervention study
title_short Reducing healthcare-associated infections incidence by a probiotic-based sanitation system: A multicentre, prospective, intervention study
title_sort reducing healthcare-associated infections incidence by a probiotic-based sanitation system: a multicentre, prospective, intervention study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6042698/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30001345
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0199616
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