First Candida auris Outbreak Experience in a Tertiary-Care General Hospital in Qatar, 2019

Background: Candida auris is an invasive, multidrug-resistant pathogen that can cause outbreaks in hospitals. The mode of transmission is through contaminated hospital items such as fomites and staff interventions. The outbreak of Candida auris affecting 13 patients at the medical intensive care uni...

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Published inInfection control and hospital epidemiology Vol. 41; no. S1; pp. s235 - s236
Main Authors Visan, Feah, Ansari, Naser Al, Wali, Walid Al, Zakaria, Almunzer, Hasanat, Omar Al, Castro, Jenalyn, Hudaib, Ghada, Ummer, Ubaid, Ajmi, Jameela Al, Asuncion, Mildred, Shaukat, Adila, Hamed, Manal
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cambridge Cambridge University Press 01.10.2020
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Summary:Background: Candida auris is an invasive, multidrug-resistant pathogen that can cause outbreaks in hospitals. The mode of transmission is through contaminated hospital items such as fomites and staff interventions. The outbreak of Candida auris affecting 13 patients at the medical intensive care unit (MICU) and medical inpatient unit, either in the form of infection or colonization, is the first documented C. auris outbreak in the Qatar. Methods: The first case was identified in November 2018 in a patient colonized in the respiratory tract. Candida auris biweekly tests were conducted. The second to fourth cases were confirmed in the MICU admitted in the same room (room 2). The fifth case was identified incidentally and was not part of the screening in another ward (6 North Medical Inpatient Unit), and 4 weeks later, Candida auris was isolated from the urine and throat of a patient on this ward. The realization that case 5 was an index case changed the direction of the outbreak investigation, and expanded screening was started among the medical inpatients. When the IPC team identified cases 6–11 and 13, all had possible epidemiological links with case 5. Results: Our root-cause analysis suggests that the index case came from another general hospital. However, because no screening protocol has been established for Candida auris , interventions have not been in place to effectively prevent and control this organism. A strong collaborative outbreak team worked to end this outbreak using the following evidence-based IPC interventions: (1) patient screening and decolonization; (2) environmental screening; (3) enhanced environmental disinfection using peracetic acid wipes, 1% chlorine, and hydrogen peroxide vapor disinfection; (4) prophylactic contact precautions; (5) enhanced hand hygiene with bare below elbows protocol; and (6) a no white gown policy. Conclusions: The outbreak of Candida auris was declared to have nbeen terminated on August 22, 2019. Despite the long period involved in this outbreak, we succeeded in ending it through the concerted efforts of a multidisciplinary team utilizing the latest scientific evidence. Funding: None Disclosures: None
ISSN:0899-823X
1559-6834
DOI:10.1017/ice.2020.789