Da. Pegues et al., POSSIBLE NOSOCOMIAL TRANSMISSION OF PSEUDOMONAS-CEPACIA IN PATIENTS WITH CYSTIC-FIBROSIS, Archives of pediatrics & adolescent medicine, 148(8), 1994, pp. 805-812
Objective: To determine whether nosocomial transmission of Pseudomonas
cepacia occurred at a hospital with endemic P cepacia infection of pa
tients with cystic fibrosis. Design: Two retrospective case-control st
udies. Setting: A large pediatric cystic fibrosis center. Participants
: To assess risk factors for acquisition of P cepacia, 18 cases, defin
ed as any patient with cystic fibrosis with first documented isolation
of P cepacia in 1988 or 1989, were compared with 18 matched P cepacia
-negative controls with cystic fibrosis. To assess potential modes of
nosocomial P cepacia transmission, 14 cases with a hospitalization(s)
between their last P cepacia-negative culture and first P cepacia-posi
tive culture were compared with 14 hospitalized P cepacia-negative con
trols with cystic fibrosis. Methods: Handwiping cultures (N=68) and se
lective environmental cultures were performed. Main Results: Cases ten
ded to be more likely than controls to have been hospitalized at the c
ystic fibrosis center in the 3 months before their first P cepacia-pos
itive culture (P=.08). In addition, cases tended to be more likely tha
n hospitalized controls with cystic fibrosis to have had a P cepacia-p
ositive roommate (P=.06) before becoming colonized with P cepacia orga
nisms. Pseudomonas cepacia was cultured from the hands of two individu
als: a P cepacia-colonized patient who had just undergone chest physio
therapy and consequent coughing and the investigator who shook the P c
epacia-positive patient's hand after the patient's procedure. Conclusi
ons: These results suggest that in this cystic fibrosis center, hospit
alization is a risk factor for P cepacia acquisition and that person-t
o-person transmission of P cepacia may occur in the hospital via hand
contact.