Interventions to Reduce the Incidence of Hospital-Onset Clostridium difficile Infection: An Agent-Based Modeling Approach to Evaluate Clinical Effectiveness in Adult Acute Care Hospitals
Authored by Anna K Barker, Oguzhan Alagoz, Nasia Safdar
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1093/cid/cix962
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Abstract
Background. Despite intensified efforts to reduce hospital-onset
Clostridium difficile infection (HO-CDI), its clinical and economic
impacts continue to worsen. Many institutions have adopted bundled
interventions that vary considerably in composition, strength of
evidence, and effectiveness. Considerable gaps remain in our knowledge
of intervention effectiveness and disease transmission, which hinders
HO-CDI prevention.
Methods. We developed an agent-based model of C. difficile transmission
in a 200-bed adult hospital using studies from the literature,
supplemented with primary data collection. The model includes an
environmental component and 4 distinct agent types: patients, visitors,
nurses, and physicians. We used the model to evaluate the comparative
clinical effectiveness of 9 single interventions and 8
multiple-intervention bundles at reducing HO-CDI and asymptomatic C.
difficile colonization.
Results. Daily cleaning with sporicidal disinfectant and C. difficile
screening at admission were the most effective single-intervention
strategies, reducing HO-CDI by 68.9\% and 35.7\%, respectively (both P
<.001). Combining these interventions into a 2-intervention bundle
reduced HO-CDI by 82.3\% and asymptomatic hospital-onset colonization by
90.6\% (both, P <.001). Adding patient hand hygiene to healthcare worker
hand hygiene reduced HO-CDI rates an additional 7.9\%. Visitor hand
hygiene and contact precaution interventions did not reduce HO-CDI,
compared with baseline. Excluding those strategies, healthcare worker
contact precautions were the least effective intervention at reducing
hospital-onset colonization and infection.
Conclusions. Identifying and managing the vast hospital reservoir of
asymptomatic C. difficile by screening and daily cleaning with
sporicidal disinfectant are high-yield strategies. These findings
provide much-needed data regarding which interventions to prioritize for
optimal C. difficile control.
Tags
Agent-based modeling
infection control
Environmental contamination
Resistant staphylococcus-aureus
Asymptomatic carriers
Length-of-stay
C. difficile
Intervention
bundles
Healthcare epidemiology
Hand-hygiene compliance
Polymerase-chain-reaction
Intensive-care
Contact
precautions
Surgical-patients
Controlled-trial
Patient contact
Antibiotic use
Sink
location