Description of a nationwide structure for monitoring nosocomial outbreaks of (highly resistant) microorganisms in the Netherlands: characteristics of outbreaks in 2012-2021

Publication date

2023-12-08

Authors

Woudt, Sjoukje Hs
Schoffelen, Annelot F
Frakking, Florine N JISNI 0000000388676744
Reuland, E AscelijnISNI 0000000388439087
Severin, Juliëtte A
den Drijver, Marije
Haenen, Anja
Nonneman, Marga Mg
Notermans, Daan W
Aan de Stegge, Desiree Cm

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Before 2012, established national surveillance systems in the Netherlands were not able to provide a timely, comprehensive epidemiological view on nosocomial outbreaks. The Healthcare-associated Infections and AntiMicrobial Resistance Monitoring Group (SO-ZI/AMR) was initiated in 2012 for timely national nosocomial outbreak monitoring and risk assessment. This paper aims to describe the achievements of the SO-ZI/AMR by presenting characteristics of outbreaks reported in 2012-2021. METHODS: Hospitals and, since 2015, long-term care facilities (LTCF) were requested to report outbreaks when (1) continuity of care was threatened, or (2) transmission continued despite control measures. A multi-disciplinary expert panel (re-)assessed the public health risk of outbreaks during monthly meetings, using 5 severity phases and based on data collected via standardised questionnaires. We descriptively studied the panel's consensus-based severity classification, distribution of (highly resistant) microorganisms, and duration and size of outbreaks between April 2012 and December 2021. RESULTS: In total, 353 hospital outbreaks and 110 LTCF outbreaks were reported. Most outbreaks (hospitals: n = 309 (88%), LTCF: n = 103 (94%)) did not progress beyond phase 1 (no public health implications, outbreak expected to be controlled within two months), one hospital outbreak reached phase 4 (insufficient/ineffective response: possible public health threat, support offered). Highly resistant microorganisms (HRMO) were involved in 269 (76%) hospital and 103 (94%) LTCF outbreaks. Most outbreaks were caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA; n = 93 (26%) in hospitals, n = 80 (72%) in LTCF), vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VRE; n = 116 (33%) in hospitals, n = 2 (2%) in LTCF) and highly resistant Enterobacterales (n = 41 (12%) in hospitals, n = 20 (18%) in LTCF). Carbapenemase-producing gram-negative bacteria were involved in 32 (9.1%) hospital and five (4.5%) LTCF outbreaks. In hospitals, VRE outbreaks had the longest duration (median 2.3; range 0.0-22.8 months) and widest range of affected patients (median 9; range 2-483). CONCLUSIONS: The SO-ZI/AMR provided national insight into the characteristics of nosocomial outbreaks over the past decade. HRMO outbreaks - mostly caused by MRSA, VRE (in hospitals) and highly resistant Enterobacterales - occurred regularly, but most of them were controlled quickly and did not develop into a public health threat. The SO-ZI/AMR has become a solid monitoring body, essential to assess risks and raise awareness of potential HRMO threats.

Keywords

Bacteria, Cross Infection/prevention & control, Disease Outbreaks/prevention & control, Hospitals, Humans, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Netherlands/epidemiology, Journal Article

Citation

Woudt, S H, Schoffelen, A F, Frakking, F N, Reuland, E A, Severin, J A, den Drijver, M, Haenen, A, Nonneman, M M, Notermans, D W, Aan de Stegge, D C, de Stoppelaar, S F, Vandenbroucke-Grauls, C M & de Greeff, S C 2023, 'Description of a nationwide structure for monitoring nosocomial outbreaks of (highly resistant) microorganisms in the Netherlands : characteristics of outbreaks in 2012-2021', Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control, vol. 12, no. 1, 143. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13756-023-01350-9