4.7 Article

The effect of re-directed patient flow in combination with targeted infection control measures on the spread of multi-drug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae in the German health-care system: a mathematical modelling approach

Journal

CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION
Volume 29, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.cmi.2022.08.001

Keywords

Basic reproduction number; Epidemiology; Health-care-associated infections; Health-care network; Multi-drug-resistant enterobacteriaceae; Network

Funding

  1. National Science Centre, Poland [2016/22/Z/ST1/00690]
  2. Germany BMBF [01KI1704B, 01KI1704C, 681055]

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The introduction of multi-drug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (MDR-E) by colonized patients transferred from high-prevalence countries has led to several large outbreaks of MDR-E in low-prevalence countries, with the risk of propagated spread to the community. This study aimed to derive a strategy to counteract the spread of MDR-E at the regional health-care network level. The results showed that targeted hospital-based infection control measures were effective in reducing the system-wide prevalence of MDR-E.
Objective: The introduction of multi-drug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (MDR-E) by colonized patients transferred from high-prevalence countries has led to several large outbreaks of MDR-E in low-prevalence countries, with the risk of propagated spread to the community. The goal of this study was to derive a strategy to counteract the spread of MDR-E at the regional health-care network level.Methods: We used a hybrid ordinary differential equation and network model built based on German health insurance data to evaluate whether the re-direction of patient flow in combination with targeted infection control measures can counteract the spread of MDR-E in the German health-care system. We applied pragmatic re-direction strategies focusing on a reduced choice of hospitals for subsequent stays after initial hospitalization but not manipulating direct transfers because these are most likely determined by medical needs.Results: The re-direction strategies alone did not reduce the system-wide spread of MDR-E (system-wide prevalence of MDR-E is 18.7% vs. 25.7%/29.9%). In contrast, targeted hospital-based infection control measures restricted to institutions with the highest institutional basic reproduction numbers in the network were identified as an effective tool for reducing system-wide prevalence (system-wide prevalence of MDR-E is 18.7% vs. 9.3%). If these measures were applied to the top one-third of hospitals, the system-wide prevalence could be reduced by approximately 80% (system-wide prevalence of 18.7% vs. 3.5% for one-third of patients subjected to interventions). A combination of this hospital-based intervention and patient re-direction strategies could not improve the effectiveness of the hospital-based approach (system-wide prevalence of MDR-E is 9.3% vs. 14.2%/14.3%).Conclusions: The pragmatic patient re-direction strategies were not capable of restricting the spread of MDR-E in a simulation of the German health-care system; in contrast, hospital-based interventions focusing on institutions identified based on network transmission patterns seem to be a promising approach for sustainable reduction of the spread of MDR-E through the German population.(c) 2022 European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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