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Adaptive bacterial response to low level chlorhexidine exposure and its implications for hand hygiene

Chlorhexidine digluconate (CHG) is commonly used in healthcare, e.g. in skin antiseptics, antimicrobial soaps, alcohol-based hand rubs and oral or wound antiseptics. Aim of the literature review was to evaluate the potential of bacteria to adapt to low level CHG exposure. A maximum 4fold MIC increas...

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Autor principal: Kampf, Günter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Shared Science Publishers OG 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6600115/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31294043
http://dx.doi.org/10.15698/mic2019.07.683
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author Kampf, Günter
author_facet Kampf, Günter
author_sort Kampf, Günter
collection PubMed
description Chlorhexidine digluconate (CHG) is commonly used in healthcare, e.g. in skin antiseptics, antimicrobial soaps, alcohol-based hand rubs and oral or wound antiseptics. Aim of the literature review was to evaluate the potential of bacteria to adapt to low level CHG exposure. A maximum 4fold MIC increase to CHG was found after low level exposure in most of the 71 evaluated bacterial species. A strong adaptive mostly stable MIC change was described in strains or isolates of the healthcare-associated species E. coli, S. marcescens and P. aeruginosa (up to 500fold, 128fold or 32fold, respectively). The highest MIC values after adaptation were 2,048 mg/l (S. marcescens) and 1,024 mg/l (P. aeruginosa). A new resistance to tetracycline, gentamicin, meropeneme or triclosan was found in some adapted isolates. In E. coli horizontal gene transfer was induced (sulfonamide resistance by conjugation), pointing out an additional risk of sublethal CHG. The use of CHG in patient care - but also all other settings such as consumer products and households - should therefore be critically assessed and restricted to indications with a proven health benefit or justifiable public health benefits. Additional CHG has no health benefit when used in alcohol-based hand rubs and is not recommended by the WHO. For routine hand washing of soiled hands the use of plain soap is sufficient, CHG in soaps has no health benefit. In surgical hand antisepsis alcohol-based hand rubs should be preferred to CHG soaps. Implementation of these principles will help to reduce avoidable selection pressure.
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spelling pubmed-66001152019-07-10 Adaptive bacterial response to low level chlorhexidine exposure and its implications for hand hygiene Kampf, Günter Microb Cell Review Chlorhexidine digluconate (CHG) is commonly used in healthcare, e.g. in skin antiseptics, antimicrobial soaps, alcohol-based hand rubs and oral or wound antiseptics. Aim of the literature review was to evaluate the potential of bacteria to adapt to low level CHG exposure. A maximum 4fold MIC increase to CHG was found after low level exposure in most of the 71 evaluated bacterial species. A strong adaptive mostly stable MIC change was described in strains or isolates of the healthcare-associated species E. coli, S. marcescens and P. aeruginosa (up to 500fold, 128fold or 32fold, respectively). The highest MIC values after adaptation were 2,048 mg/l (S. marcescens) and 1,024 mg/l (P. aeruginosa). A new resistance to tetracycline, gentamicin, meropeneme or triclosan was found in some adapted isolates. In E. coli horizontal gene transfer was induced (sulfonamide resistance by conjugation), pointing out an additional risk of sublethal CHG. The use of CHG in patient care - but also all other settings such as consumer products and households - should therefore be critically assessed and restricted to indications with a proven health benefit or justifiable public health benefits. Additional CHG has no health benefit when used in alcohol-based hand rubs and is not recommended by the WHO. For routine hand washing of soiled hands the use of plain soap is sufficient, CHG in soaps has no health benefit. In surgical hand antisepsis alcohol-based hand rubs should be preferred to CHG soaps. Implementation of these principles will help to reduce avoidable selection pressure. Shared Science Publishers OG 2019-03-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6600115/ /pubmed/31294043 http://dx.doi.org/10.15698/mic2019.07.683 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article released under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license, which allows the unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are acknowledged.
spellingShingle Review
Kampf, Günter
Adaptive bacterial response to low level chlorhexidine exposure and its implications for hand hygiene
title Adaptive bacterial response to low level chlorhexidine exposure and its implications for hand hygiene
title_full Adaptive bacterial response to low level chlorhexidine exposure and its implications for hand hygiene
title_fullStr Adaptive bacterial response to low level chlorhexidine exposure and its implications for hand hygiene
title_full_unstemmed Adaptive bacterial response to low level chlorhexidine exposure and its implications for hand hygiene
title_short Adaptive bacterial response to low level chlorhexidine exposure and its implications for hand hygiene
title_sort adaptive bacterial response to low level chlorhexidine exposure and its implications for hand hygiene
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6600115/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31294043
http://dx.doi.org/10.15698/mic2019.07.683
work_keys_str_mv AT kampfgunter adaptivebacterialresponsetolowlevelchlorhexidineexposureanditsimplicationsforhandhygiene