Vancomycin Resistant Enterococcus (VRE) - emergence to endemicity in a tertiary hospital in Singapore.

Indumathi Venkatachalam, May Kyawt Aung, Deborah Chooi Mun Lai, Mabel Zhi Qi Foo, Jean Xiang Ying Sim, Shalvi Arora, Aung Myat Oo, Yuke Tien Fong, Kwee Yuen Tan, Lai Chee Lee, Moi Lin Ling
Author Information
  1. Indumathi Venkatachalam: Department of Infection Prevention and Epidemiology, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore; Department of Infectious Diseases, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore. Electronic address: indumathi.venkatachalam@singhealth.com.sg.
  2. May Kyawt Aung: Department of Infection Prevention and Epidemiology, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore. Electronic address: may.kyawt.aung@sgh.com.sg.
  3. Deborah Chooi Mun Lai: Department of Microbiology, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore. Electronic address: deborah.lai.c.m@singhealth.com.sg.
  4. Mabel Zhi Qi Foo: Department of Infection Prevention and Epidemiology, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore.
  5. Jean Xiang Ying Sim: Department of Infection Prevention and Epidemiology, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore; Department of Infectious Diseases, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore. Electronic address: jean.sim.x.y@singhealth.com.sg.
  6. Shalvi Arora: Department of Infection Prevention and Epidemiology, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore. Electronic address: shalvi.arora@sgh.com.sg.
  7. Aung Myat Oo: Department of Infection Prevention and Epidemiology, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore. Electronic address: aung.myat.oo@sgh.com.sg.
  8. Yuke Tien Fong: Department of Infection Prevention and Epidemiology, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore. Electronic address: fong.yuke.tien@singhealth.com.sg.
  9. Kwee Yuen Tan: Department of Infection Prevention and Epidemiology, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore. Electronic address: tan.kwee.yuen@sgh.com.sg.
  10. Lai Chee Lee: Department of Infection Prevention and Epidemiology, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore. Electronic address: lee.lai.chee@sgh.com.sg.
  11. Moi Lin Ling: Department of Infection Prevention and Epidemiology, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore. Electronic address: ling.moi.lin@singhealth.com.sg.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the evolving epidemiology and risk associations of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE) between 2018 and 2023 in a tertiary hospital in Singapore.
METHODS: Inpatients in Singapore General Hospital (SGH) between January 2018 and December 2023 were included. VRE surveillance criteria changed in August 2020 and November 2022. Incidence of any VRE (VRE (all)), VRE from surveillance (VRE (surveillance)), clinical VRE isolates (VRE (clinical)), healthcare-associated VRE infections (HA-VRE (infections)) and bacteremia (VRE (bacteremia)) were reviewed. Three case-control studies were conducted. Environmental screening was performed.
RESULTS: Over the six-year study period there were 5,173 patients with VRE, of whom 3,141 (60.7%) had HA-VRE, 5157 (99.7%) had E.faecium and 4,336 (84%) carried vanA.121 (2.2%) patients had VRE bacteraemia with mortality 50.4%. There were significant changes in incidence of VRE (all), VRE (surveillance) and VRE (clinical) but HA-VRE (infections) and VRE (bacteremia) remained stable. VRE acquisition was associated with presence of concurrent MRSA (OR 9.4, 95% CI 1.3-66.8, p-value < 0.02), CPE (OR 7.2, 95% CI 2.0-26.0, p-value <0.001), ICU admission (OR 6.1, 95% CI 2.8-13.2, p<0.001), hemodialysis (OR 4.6, 95% CI 1.8-12.0, p<0.001), surgery (OR 3.7, 95% CI 1.6-8.3, p<0.001), vancomycin use (OR 28.2, 95% CI 5.4-146.5, p<0.001) and metronidazole use (OR 4.4, 95% CI 1.0-19.0, p-value 0.04) in the preceding three-months. VRE infection had similar risk associations. 12.5% of environmental samples were VRE positive.
CONCLUSION: VRE endemic state in SGH is associated with significant patient and environmental VRE burden. VRE acquisition and infection have been associated with co-carriage of MRSA or CPE, vancomycin and metronidazole use, ICU admission and prior surgery. Targeted infection prevention and antimicrobial-stewardship programs may reduce VRE (infections).

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Created with Highcharts 10.0.0VREOR95%CI2surveillance410001infectionsp<0EnterococcusSingaporeclinicalHA-VREbacteremia53associatedp-valueuseinfectionriskassociations20182023tertiaryhospitalSGHpatients7%significantacquisitionMRSACPE7ICUadmission6surgeryvancomycinmetronidazoleenvironmentalVancomycinResistantendemicityOBJECTIVE:describeevolvingepidemiologyvancomycin-resistantMETHODS:InpatientsGeneralHospitalJanuaryDecemberincludedcriteriachangedAugust2020November2022Incidenceisolateshealthcare-associatedreviewedThreecase-controlstudiesconductedEnvironmentalscreeningperformedRESULTS:six-yearstudyperiod17314160515799Efaecium33684%carriedvanA1212%bacteraemiamortality504%changesincidenceremainedstablepresenceconcurrent93-668<020-26<08-13hemodialysis8-126-8284-1460-1904precedingthree-monthssimilar125%samplespositiveCONCLUSION:endemicstatepatientburdenco-carriagepriorTargetedpreventionantimicrobial-stewardshipprogramsmayreduce-emergence

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