PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study shows broader screening methods help prevent spread of dangerous fungal pathogen in hospitals

Screening high-risk patients for Candida auris allows for early detection and implementation of infection control measures to prevent hospital outbreaks

2024-10-31
(Press-News.org)

Study Shows Broader Screening Methods Help Prevent Spread of Dangerous Fungal Pathogen in Hospitals

Screening high-risk patients for Candida auris allows for early detection and implementation of infection control measures to prevent hospital outbreaks

 

Arlington, Va. — October 31, 2024 — A new study published today in the American Journal of Infection Control (AJIC) describes the outcome of a shift in hospital screening protocols for Candida auris, a dangerous and often drug-resistant fungal pathogen that spreads easily in hospital environments. A comparison of screening results and patient outcomes before and after the change at Mount Sinai Brooklyn, demonstrates the value of broader screening of high-risk patients. As a result of expanded screening, more cases were caught early, enabling infection prevention and control teams to isolate them before they could infect other patients or contaminate shared hospital equipment.

C. auris is an emerging fungal pathogen, first identified in 2009 and now found around the world. While the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other public health agencies recommend screening patients admitted to the hospital to identify anyone colonized by the pathogen, there are many different approaches to screening. Broader screening catches more cases, but it requires more resources and can be impractical in healthcare facilities where patients cannot easily be isolated while results are generated.

The study published today in AJIC was triggered by the case of a single patient. The patient was moved from a skilled nursing facility to the Mount Sinai Brooklyn hospital in 2022; after more than two months at the hospital, the patient was diagnosed with a C. auris infection. The patient had not been screened for C. auris upon admission because the hospital’s screening protocols at the time classified the patient as low-risk. After diagnosis, the hospital conducted a full outbreak investigation, testing 118 people who were directly exposed to the patient or shared equipment with the patient. The investigation identified eight additional patients who tested positive for C. auris.

Given the time and resources required for the investigation, the hospital’s Infection Prevention and Control Department adjusted its recommended C. auris screening protocols for new patients, expanding them to include all admissions from skilled nursing facilities or patients who had been in such a facility within the past month. After using the new protocols for one year, they compared outcomes for that year to the nine-month period prior to the screening change.

The study spanned 591 patients who were screened for C. auris; that includes 34 patients with the old screening approach and 557 patients screened under the expanded protocol. The positivity rate increased from 1.8% to 2.4%, indicating that more cases were being detected with the broader screening approach. More specifically, the old criteria would have flagged 53 patients as high-risk, and nine of them would have tested positive for C. auris. The expanded protocol added 538 more patients, five of whom tested positive but would not have been identified through the old screening protocol. Ultimately, the new protocol identified eight cases that would have been missed, representing a significant threat to other patients and the hospital environment. Test results were returned within three days, allowing the team to identify cases quickly and implement appropriate isolation, contact, and disinfection precautions to prevent outbreaks.

“Early identification of patients colonized with C. auris allows us to protect other patients and helps to prevent the spread of the pathogen to the hospital environment and shared equipment,” said Scott Lorin, MD, president of Mount Sinai Brooklyn and an author of the study. “Notably, we saw no spread of this infection from the eight patients identified by the expanded screening protocols who would have been missed by our prior protocol. When you consider how many other people they came into contact with during their hospital stays, that’s a lot of patients kept safer by the implementation of broader screening. This expanded screening protocol has allowed us to detect Candida auris cases earlier, helping us prevent potential hospital outbreaks.”

Additional details from the study include:

The study was performed at an acute care hospital with 212 beds, where staff members have been caring for patients colonized with C. auris since the pathogen first emerged in New York City in 2016. The hospital’s original screening framework called for testing patients with recent previous stays at nine specific skilled nursing facilities known to care for people with C. auris, of whom the highest-risk patients were considered those who were ventilator-dependent or admitted with a tracheostomy. Under the new screening guidelines, it was not practical for the hospital to isolate every patient while awaiting test results. Instead, the high-risk patients were isolated while the lower-risk patients (those from a skilled nursing facility but without a tracheostomy or ventilator) were treated using Standard Precautions until results were reported. “This is a compelling demonstration of the value of broader screening for C. auris among patients admitted to hospitals after spending time at a skilled nursing facility,” said Tania Bubb, PhD, RN, CIC, FAPIC, 2024 APIC president. “Expanded screening is an effective infection prevention practice that should be considered at all hospitals, particularly in areas where this pathogen has been circulating.”

 

About APIC

Founded in 1972, the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC) is the leading association for infection preventionists and epidemiologists. With more than 15,000 members, APIC advances the science and practice of infection prevention and control. APIC carries out its mission through research, advocacy, and patient safety; education, credentialing, and certification; and fostering development of the infection prevention and control workforce of the future. Together with our members and partners, we are working toward a safer world through the prevention of infection. Join us and learn more at apic.org.

About AJIC

As the official peer-reviewed journal of APIC, The American Journal of Infection Control (AJIC) is the foremost resource on infection control, epidemiology, infectious diseases, quality management, occupational health, and disease prevention. Published by Elsevier, AJIC also publishes infection control guidelines from APIC and the CDC. AJIC is included in Index Medicus and CINAHL. Visit AJIC at ajicjournal.org.

NOTES FOR EDITORS

“Analysis of an expanded admission screening protocol for Candida auris at a New York City hospital,” by Aaron Cheng, Karen Marie Brody, Jordan Ehni, Zachary Gallate, Scott Lorin, Bernard Camins, and Waleed Javaid, was published online in AJIC on October 31, 2024. DOI is: 10.1016/j.ajic.2024.08.027. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajic.2024.08.027

AUTHORS

Aaron Cheng, MPH, Mount Sinai Beth Israel and Mount Sinai Brooklyn

Karen Brody, MSN, RN, GERO-BC, CIC, Mount Sinai Beth Israel and Mount Sinai Brooklyn

Jordan Ehni, MPH, CIC, Mount Sinai Beth Israel and Mount Sinai Brooklyn

Zachary Gallate, MS, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Scott Lorin, MD, MBA, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Bernard Camins, MD, MS, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Waleed Javaid, MD, MBA, MS (corresponding author: Waleed.Javaid@mountsinai.org), Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

# # #

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Research spotlight: Testing a model for depression care in Malawi using existing medical infrastructure

2024-10-31
How would you summarize your study for a lay audience? We tested a model of depression care in Malawi, a low-income country in sub-Saharan Africa, that builds off the infrastructure of the country’s HIV delivery system. The intervention involved clinical officers who delivered medications for depression, and it involved lay personnel, people living in the community, to deliver psychotherapy. Unlike past research, we did not limit our evaluation to improvements in depression; we also looked at improvements in other chronic health conditions that participants had, and we measured effects on household members. What knowledge gap does your study help to ...

Depression care in low-income nations can improve overall health

2024-10-31
Treating people in low-income countries for major depressive disorder can also help improve their physical health and household members’ wellbeing, demonstrating that mental health treatments can be cost effective, according to a new RAND study.   Researchers examined a program in the sub-Saharan nation of Malawi that builds off the infrastructure of the country’s HIV care system and trains local people in rural communities to help treat people who suffer from depression.   The study found participants had significant improvements in their depression symptoms, ...

The BMJ investigates dispute over US group’s involvement in WHO’s trans health guideline

2024-10-30
The World Health Organization (WHO) says that it is adhering to standard protocol in pursuing its transgender health guideline, but the process has been criticised for lacking transparency and an association with WPATH - an organisation that supports the “gender affirming” approach, including hormones and surgery, for all ages - and is under fire for meddling with its own guideline development. In The BMJ today, freelance journalist Jennifer Block investigates these concerns and the questions they raise about how evidence based the panel’s recommendations would be. Earlier ...

Personal info and privacy control may be key to better visits with AI doctors

2024-10-30
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Artificial intelligence (AI) may one day play a larger role in medicine than the online symptom checkers available today. But these “AI doctors” may need to get more personal than human doctors to increase patient satisfaction, according to a study led by researchers at Penn State. They found that the more social information an AI doctor recalls about patients, the higher the patients’ satisfaction, but only if they were offered privacy control. The research team published their findings in the journal Communication Research. “We tend to think of AI doctors as machines ...

NIH study demonstrates long-term benefits of weight-loss surgery in young people

2024-10-30
What: Young people with severe obesity who underwent weight-loss surgery at age 19 or younger continued to see sustained weight loss and resolution of common obesity-related comorbidities 10 years later, according to results from a large clinical study funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Study participants with an average age of 17 underwent gastric bypass or sleeve gastrectomy weight-loss surgery. After 10 years, participants sustained an average of 20% reduction in body mass index (BMI), 55% reduction of type 2 diabetes, 57% reduction of hypertension, and 54% reduction of abnormal cholesterol. Both gastric ...

Sustained remission of diabetes and other obesity-related conditions found a decade after weight loss surgery in adolescence

2024-10-30
Ten years after undergoing bariatric surgery as teens, over half of study participants demonstrated not only sustained weight loss, but also resolution of obesity-related conditions, such as type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol, according to the report published in the New England Journal of Medicine. “Our study presents impressive outcomes of the longest follow-up of weight loss surgery during adolescence, which validates bariatric surgery as a safe and effective long-term obesity management strategy,” said lead author Justin Ryder, PhD, Vice Chair of Research for the Department ...

Low-level lead poisoning is still pervasive in the US and globally

2024-10-30
Chronic, low-level lead poisoning is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease in adults and cognitive deficits in children, even at levels previously thought to be safe, according to a new paper by Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, Simon Fraser University in Canada, and Harvard Medical School, and Boston Children’s Hospital. Low-level lead poisoning is a risk factor for preterm Birth, cognitive deficits and attention deficit–hyperactivity disorder, (ADHD), as well as increased blood pressure and reduced heart rate variability. The findings ...

How researchers can maximize biological insights using animal-tracking devices

How researchers can maximize biological insights using animal-tracking devices
2024-10-30
Biologgers allow us to see with unprecedented precision how animals move and behave in the wild. But that's only part of the picture, according to a UC Santa Cruz ecologist renowned for using biologging data to tell the deeper story about the lives of marine mammals in a changing world. In a new opinion piece published on October 30 in Trends in Ecology and Evolution, researchers present a framework intended to underscore the value of biologging data for testing important questions about the natural world. They urge that now is the time to build upon "discovery-based science," where observations are presented ...

Research shows new method helps doctors safely remove dangerous heart infections without surgery

2024-10-30
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Doctors at Mayo Clinic used a new catheter-based approach to draw out resistant pockets of infection that settle in the heart, known as right-sided infective endocarditis, without surgery. Unless treated quickly, the walled-off infections can grow, severely damaging heart valves and potentially affecting other organs as well. In a recent study, over 90% of the participants had their infection cleared, and they had lower in-hospital mortality compared to those whose infections remained. The research is part of a Mayo Clinic-led study ...

Rapid horizontal eye movement can improve stability in people with Parkinson’s

2024-10-30
 Rapid side-to-side eye movements can help stabilize posture, avoid falls and maintain balance for people with Parkinson’s disease, just as they can for healthy people. This seemingly counterintuitive conclusion was reached by researchers at São Paulo State University (UNESP) in Brazil and the University of Lille in France in a study supported by FAPESP. An article on the study is published in the journal Biomechanics. Ten individuals diagnosed with Parkinson’s and 11 neurologically healthy individuals participated in the study. All participants were over 60 and were submitted to tests that ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

South Korea completes delivery of ITER vacuum vessel sectors

Global research team develops advanced H5N1 detection kit to tackle avian flu

From food crops to cancer clinics: Lessons in extermination resistance

Scientists develop novel high-fidelity quantum computing gate

Novel detection technology alerts health risks from TNT metabolites

New XR simulator improves pediatric nursing education

New copper metal-organic framework nanozymes enable intelligent food detection

The Lancet: Deeply entrenched racial and geographic health disparities in the USA have increased over the last two decades—as life expectancy gap widens to 20 years

2 MILLION mph galaxy smash-up seen in unprecedented detail

Scientists find a region of the mouse gut tightly regulated by the immune system

How school eligibility influences the spread of infectious diseases: Insights for future outbreaks

UM School of Medicine researchers link snoring to behavioral problems in adolescents without declines in cognition

The Parasaurolophus’ pipes: Modeling the dinosaur’s crest to study its sound #ASA187

St. Jude appoints leading scientist to create groundbreaking Center of Excellence for Structural Cell Biology

Hear this! Transforming health care with speech-to-text technology #ASA187

Exploring the impact of offshore wind on whale deaths #ASA187

Mass General Brigham and BIDMC researchers unveil an AI protein engineer capable of making proteins ‘better, faster, stronger’

Metabolic and bariatric surgery safe and effective for patients with severe obesity

Smarter city planning: MSU researchers use brain activity to predict visits to urban areas

Using the world’s fastest exascale computer, ACM Gordon Bell Prize-winning team presents record-breaking algorithm to advance understanding of chemistry and biology

Jeffrey Hubbell joins NYU Tandon to lead new university-wide health engineering initiative & expand the school’s bioengineering focus

Fewer than 7% of global hotspots for whale-ship collisions have protection measures in place

Oldies but goodies: Study shows why elderly animals offer crucial scientific insights

Math-selective US universities reduce gender gap in STEM fields

Researchers identify previously unknown compound in drinking water

Chloronitramide anion – a newly characterized contaminant prevalent in chloramine treated tap water

Population connectivity shapes cultural complexity in chimpanzees

Direct hearing tests show that minke whales can hear high-frequency sounds

Whale-ship collision risk mapped across Earth’s oceans

Bye-bye microplastics: new plastic is recyclable and fully ocean-degradable

[Press-News.org] Study shows broader screening methods help prevent spread of dangerous fungal pathogen in hospitals
Screening high-risk patients for Candida auris allows for early detection and implementation of infection control measures to prevent hospital outbreaks