Q-fever and lymphoma linked!

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Okay, the following is not strictly infection control, but it has to do with infections and it will have major impact on how people who were unfortunate enough to contract Q-fever will feel about their safety.   The pathway of chronic infections – interaction with IL-10 – immune-supression and cancer isn’t new, but to my knowledge mainly described in viruses. The Netherland had one of the largest outbreaks of Q-fever, leaving behind a sizable number of (chronic) Q-fever patients.  Many of these patients will be shellshocked by the increased chance of developing lymphoma. Consequently, research to cooperate (or dismiss) Raoult’s study is needed, to relief the patient population from uncertainty.

Bacterium that causes Q fever linked to non-Hodgkin lymphoma

AMERICAN SOCIETY OF HEMATOLOGY

(WASHINGTON, October, 13, 2015) -The bacterium that causes Q fever, an infectious disease that humans contract from animals, is associated with an increased risk of lymphoma, according to a study published online today in Blood, the Journal of the American Society of Hematology (ASH).

Q fever is caused by infection with Coxiella burnetii, a bacterium primarily transmitted through the excrement of cattle, sheep, and goats. Approximately 3 percent of healthy adults in the United States and 10-20 percent of those in high-risk occupations such as veterinarians and farmers have antibodies for C. burnetii, suggesting previous infection.1 Symptoms of Q fever vary from person to person and can be acute and resolve spontaneously, or chronic and persistent. Because some patients have been reported to also suffer from lymphoma, researchers believed that this type of cancer could be a risk factor for Q fever. However, the experience of one patient prompted doctors to consider the opposite – that the infection might actually cause the lymphoma.

“During a follow-up scan in a patient we had successfully treated for Q fever, we observed a tumor close to the location of the previous infection,” said senior study author Didier Raoult, MD, PhD, of Aix-Marseille University in Marseille, France. “The discovery that it was a lymphoma tumor containing C. burnetii encouraged us to consider that the infection might have contributed to the development of the cancer.”

In order to better understand the association between C. burnetii and lymphoma, Dr. Raoult and colleagues screened 1,468 patients treated at the French National Referral Center for Q Fever from 2004 to 2014. Investigators conducted imaging of patient tissue samples to identify seven people, including the initial patient, who developed lymphoma after C. burnetiiinfection (6 patients were diagnosed with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and one with follicular lymphoma). Of all the Q fever patients included in the study, 440 presented a persistent infection concentrated to one area.

To determine if patients with Q fever have a higher risk of lymphoma than the general population, researchers compared the incidence of lymphoma in the Q fever registry to the incidence reported in France’s general population. Based on this analysis, researchers conclude that patients with Q fever are 25 times more likely to develop diffuse large B-cell lymphoma than those without the infection. In addition, the odds of lymphoma in patients with persistent concentrated infections are higher than those with other forms of Q fever.

Upon further imaging of the patient samples, investigators observed that Q fever patients with lymphoma demonstrate overproduction of the critical anti-inflammatory pathway interleukin-10 (IL-10), suggesting that suppression of the immune system may have allowed the lymphoma cells to evade immune detection and multiply.

“As we continue to learn more about the association between C. burnetii and lymphoma, these results should encourage clinicians to survey high-risk patients as early as possible for potential cancer,” said Dr. Raoult. “Ultimately, this early diagnosis and treatment would improve outcomes for Q fever patients who subsequently develop lymphoma, particularly those with B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma.”

State of the World’s antibiotics

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The State of the World’s antibiotcs, 2015, was just released by the Center for Diseases Dynamics, Economics & Policy (http://www.cddep.org). For all those interested in antimicrobial resistance this report is a must read.

To cite from the publication, this State of the World’s Antibiotics report records the status of this important global resource and provides critical policy analysis on three issues:

  • global patterns and trends in antibiotic resistance and 
antibiotic use in human beings and animals
  • the existing antibiotic supply and the research and development pipeline
  • interventions that have been shown to help rationalize antibiotic use and are practicable in all countries.

While being wonderful, the reports include a figure from a 2013 Lancet ID publication, a colleague (@ChristinaGrauls) alerted me to. According to figure 2-2: Carbapenem retail sales in selected countries, 2005–2010, the retail sales and thus probable consumption of carbapenems per 1,000 population is identical for the Netherlands and the USA. Somehow, I find that hard to believe.

Antibiotics and the Netherlands

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Antimicrobial resistance, control of antibiotic use and infection control are some of the things the Dutch presumably do well. Some of the Dutch infection control policies, such as “Search & Destroy” helped to stop the introduction of MRSA for a long time. I addition, the prevalence of other MDRO is low in comparison to many other countries. Still, more needed to be done, and consequently, the Dutch were (one of) the first that made antimicrobial stewardship teams (A-teams) compulsory for every hospital and presently plan introduction in other healthcare settings. Last but not least, the fight against antimicrobial resistance will be an important topic, while the Dutch hold the Presidency of the European Union in the first half of 2016.

Thus, what else could we ask for? A few weeks ago, I had at least one request: basic antibiotics.

Due to fading reimbursement policies and the constant pressure to sale drugs for decreasingly lower prices, the production for and/or distribution of several drugs within the Netherlands is no longer possible. Latest victim: i.v. penicillin, which is no longer available in my country (high-resource setting). While it seems difficult to argue for small spectrum antibiotics in the absence of one of the important ones, there is some good news: I no longer have to argue whether to use penicillin or a 3rd generation cephalosporin for certain indications. Ceph it is!

Endoscope Reprocessing Survey

What-do-you-think

Recent reports of multidrug-resistant infections related to contaminated endoscopes, which have intricate mechanisms and channels that are especially difficult to clean, have raised awareness about the necessity for meticulous reprocessing of all types of endoscopes to prevent the transmission of pathogens to patients.

In response to concerns from various countries about inadequately reprocessed endoscopes and to prevent further transmittal of infections by endoscopes, the ISC Infection Prevention & Control Working Group prioritized this issue in a meeting earlier this year and created a survey on current Endoscope Reprocessing Practices that could be used to compare such practices of institutions around the globe.

We would ask you to share the link to the on-line survey and encourage as many of your colleagues from various health care facilities to complete this. To complete this survey you need to be involved in Endoscope reprocessing activities or know the guidelines and structure of your institutions with regard to Endoscope reprocessing.

Thank you for your participation and for sharing the link!

Link to survey: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/6ZSGF5L

This checklist was created by the following members of ISC IPC working group. Andreas Voss, Alex Friedrich, Peter Collignon, Moi Lin Ling, Brenda Ang, Wing Hong Seto, Paul Tambyah, Eli Perencevich, Marin Schweizer, Leanne Frazer, Achilleas Gikas, Tom Gottlieb, Joost Hopman, Nikki Kenters, Inge Huijskens, Kalisvar Marimuthu, Rehab El-Sokkary, Yogandree Ramsamy, Margaret Vos, Ermira Tartari, Debkishore Gupta.

Up-date on M. chimaera

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More and more reports and guidance (Ref) appear with regard to Mycobacterial infections associated with heater cooler units used during thoracic surgery. As mentioned in this blog before, the infections are attributed to aerosol generated by the contaminated heater cooler units that are located in or adjacent to the operating room (Ref).

Just now, researchers published 10 patients with disseminated Mycobacterium chimaera infections subsequent to open-heart surgery at three (CH, GER, NL) European Hospitals (Eur Heart J. 2015 Jul 17).

What makes this infections special, is the fact that the time to infection may takes months to years and that the micro-organism in question is easily missed by routine bacterial diagnostics.

The word is out, that other, difficult to diagnose micro-organisms e.g. Legionella are possibly causing post-operative infections, too. Thus, I believe that we can expect more cases with different pathogens in the near future.

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Man’s best friend fetching noro

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Caffy et al. identified man’s best friend, dogs (sorry for all those cat lovers), as a possible source of human norovirus.   The UK-based-researcher showed that different genotypes of human norovirus-like particles can bind to canine gastrointestinal tissue, suggesting that infection is (theoretically) possible.  In addition, some of the dogs mounted an immune response to human norovirus.

How much of a problem do we actually have? Time to let Bella & Buster go?

In my opinion this seems still to be unclear. Neither do we know whether dogs could shed human norovirus in quantities necessary to cause infections in humans, nor (and most importantly) did the researchers succeed to detected human norovirus in the canine feces samples. Thus, so far no reason to switch your best friend with a gold fish – which, by the way, might carry the risk of atypical mycobacteria!

Caddy Sl et al.  J Clin Microbiol. 2015 Jun;53(6):1873-83. doi: 10.1128/JCM.02778-14. Epub 2015 Apr 1
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MRSA in Denmark

MRSA

(from Statens Serum Institut, EPI-News, N023-2015)

‘The number of hospital­-acquired cases observed in 2014 increased to 95 from 52 cases in 2013, but still comprise only a limited share of the total number of cases (3%). The number of MRSA cases of the CC398 type, which is closely associated with pigs, increased substantially from 643 cases in 2013 to 1,276 cases in 2014 and comprised 43% of the total number of cases. Community­-acquired MRSA, i.e. in persons with no known contact to pigs, hospitals or nursing homes, comprised 946 cases in 2014, compared with 821 cases in 2013. In 478 of these cases (51%), there was known exposure to a person with MRSA, most frequently a member of the household (92%). In 56 cases, MRSA was isolated from blood, corresponding to 2.9% of all S. aureus bacteraemia cases, which is a substantial increase with respect to recent years, but the figure remains low compared with other European countries.’

And here I stop citing the report. For those interested in the complete report, please follow the link: MRSA Denmark.

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ICPIC 2015

all-in-oneSorry, this was the attempt of a mobile upload straight from the meeting. Here a cleaned version, actually including  the picture. I promise, I will not continue (for now) to promote ICPIC via this blog. I do so via Twitter (@avipnl), but someone just presented a nice slide expressing the fact that you want a lot (too much) from one thing – in this case disinfection wipes.
“Wipes are like an egg-laying, milk-giving, wolly pig!”

CRE – too weak to spread!?

superbug

(Photo: thinkprogress.org)

In the May issue of ICHE, Weber et al. published their findings of a study looking at the environmental contamination of rooms occupied  by patients colonized or infected with CRE. In addition to their observations they actively inoculated test surfaces with 102 CRE (which I find rather low). They found that the contamination in the patients’ room was infrequent (8.4%) and at low levels (5.1 CFU/120cm2). With the single exception of K. pneumoniae on formica, alle CRE had a less than 15% survival at 24 hours and a 0% survival after 72 hours.

Should we just conclude that the chance of CRE transmission from the environment is very low?

I believe that this conclusion would be too early and probably wrong. The survival of micro-organisms in the environment is clearly strain dependent and while the authors used clinical isolates they did not mention if they included a strain that has proven its ability to spread (eg. outbreak isolates). In general multi-resistant bacteria may loose some of their fitness – including the ability to survive in the environment – but survival studies like those of Kramer et al. show survival of multiple weeks for E. coli and Klebsiella spp.

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EBOLA VIRUS DISEASE – RELATED ACTIVITIES AT ICPIC 2015

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Sorry, as part of the ICPIC organizers, I can’t stop myself to post this.

At ICPIC 2015, there will be a large number of activities related to Ebola virus disease (EVD). Due to the unique experience of field workers and scientific experts present at ICPIC 2015, and considering the large demand, the organizers and scientific committee members are glad to inform ICPIC participants about the many activities around EVD that will take place during ICPIC 2015.

Ebola virus disease will be addressed:

  • at the pre-ICPIC workshop “Ebola: Hands On” on Tuesday 16 June (10:00 to 16:50) in the presence of more than 30 field experts and faculties. The “Ebola: Hands On” workshop is free for ICPIC participants
  • at the Opening Ceremony
  • during ICPIC at MTE, symposium, poster and poster rounds sessions

We are convinced that ICPIC participants will get the best insight and advice on Ebola virus disease out of these activities.

Ebola Activities At ICPIC

For those interested in Ebola I might add that ARIC just published “Preparedness of institutions around the world for managing patients with Ebola virus disease: an infection control readiness checklist” a first project of the newly establish ISC working group on infection prevention and control.