September CDC HAIS
September CDC HAIS
September CDC HAIS
THEME ISSUE
Emerging Infections Program
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Abstract
The Emerging Infections Program (EIP) network, a CDC-supported, public health surveillance
and research network, has conducted population-based surveillance for severe bacterial
infections since 1995 through the Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs). This program has
successfully characterized the magnitude of infections, the patient populations affected, and risk
factors for infections. Until 2004–2005, when the ABCs initiated surveillance for invasive
methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections, pathogens tracked by EIP were
primarily associated with communities rather than with health care. In 2005, CDC’s National
Nosocomial Infections Surveillance System, a longstanding, hospital-based surveillance system
for HAIs, was integrated into the new National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN). With the
rapid expansion of NHSN during 2006–2010, additional complementary approaches were
needed to define more fully the epidemiology of HAIs, drug-resistant pathogens, and
antimicrobial drug use in US health care settings. Consequently, the Healthcare-Associated
Infections Community Interface (HAIC) activity was launched to address this need; to bring
together existing EIP HAI-related work into a single organizational structure (except for invasive
methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus surveillance, which remained part of the ABCs); and
to develop further the EIP’s involvement and expertise in HAI epidemiology. The HAIC activity
was initiated because of a growing need for a flexible infrastructure in which to conduct HAI-
related surveillance and applied research activities and because of the increasing role of state
health departments in the implementation of reporting and preventing HAIs through regional and
statewide collaboration.
Over the past 5 years, the HAIC activity has become a national public health resource for data on
urgent and emerging infectious diseases related to health care. The HAIC activity seeks to
promote patient safety and health care quality through 2 main initiatives: 1) evaluation of the
epidemiology and public health effects of HAIs to understand emerging pathogens and
populations at risk; and 2) exploration of innovations to improve national surveillance and
evaluation of HAI prevention and control strategies.
HAIC activity projects are divided into 2 major categories: 1) pathogen-specific, population- and
laboratory-based surveillance (for which 2 projects predated the formation of the HAIC activity);
and 2) epidemiologic innovations. The HAIC activity currently conducts population-based
surveillance aimed at defining the effects of disease and the epidemiology of infections caused
by Clostridium difficile, Candida species (bloodstream infections only), and carbapenem-
resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) and Acinetobacter baumannii cultured from urine and sterile
body sites (2). Although each of these 3 surveillance projects has its own case definition,
catchment area, and data collection, all use laboratory-based criteria to identify cases. In
addition, all 3 projects collect and submit isolates to CDC for further characterization, and they
all collect data from medical records to confirm patient eligibility as a case, obtain
demographics, and classify cases as either community associated or health care associated. When
disease burden is high and surveillance catchment areas are large, CDC can work with specific
EIP sites to develop medical records reviews and isolate sampling strategies that reduce
resources needed for surveillance.
In 2008, population-based candidemia surveillance began in 2 EIP sites (Georgia and Maryland)
to follow up previous surveillance conducted in the 8-county metropolitan area of Atlanta,
Georgia, and in San Francisco, California, during 1992–1993 (3) and in Baltimore City and
Baltimore County, Maryland, and in Connecticut during 1998–2000 (4). The primary objective
of the ongoing surveillance is to assess changes in the incidence and epidemiology of these
infections, including changes in antifungal resistance. Cases are identified through blood cultures
that are positive for Candida species in residents of catchment areas. Submission and study of
isolates enables a better understanding of antifungal susceptibility patterns among invasive
Candida isolates; this information is not usually available from hospital clinical microbiology
laboratories. Analysis of data collected during 2008–2011 in Georgia and Maryland showed
marked declines in candidemia in infants, the group that had the highest rates of infection in the
1990s (5). The data also showed relatively stable levels of fluconazole resistance among Candida
bloodstream isolates (6). Subsequent analyses identified increases in echinocandin-resistant and
multidrug-resistant Candida infections during 2008–2012 (7). After sites in Oregon and
Tennessee were added in 2011, candidemia surveillance is now conducted in 4 EIP sites,
covering a population of 7.7 million persons. Data from this expanded surveillance are used to
describe candidemia in these populations and to evaluate the emergence of echinocandin
resistance in C. glabrata (8).
Surveillance for C. difficile infections (CDIs) began in 2009 and expanded by 2011 to include all
of the 10 EIP sites and a population of ≈11.5 million persons. The objectives of CDI surveillance
are to compile national estimates for CDIs associated with the community and with health care,
to describe the epidemiology of these CDIs, and to characterize C. difficile strains. CDI
surveillance captures the broad spectrum of CDI cases that occur in all community and health
care settings (including nursing homes and facilities for rehabilitation and acute care) and
collects extensive clinical and microbiologic data. CDI cases are defined on the basis of C.
difficile–positive toxin or molecular assays for catchment area residents >1 year of age. Clinical
data are used to confirm that patients had symptoms consistent with CDI, and epidemiologic data
are used to classify cases into 1 of 3 categories: community associated; community-onset, health
care facility associated; and health care facility onset. C. difficile isolates are collected from a
convenience sample of laboratories and sent to CDC for molecular characterization, which
enables comparative analysis of disease characteristics by strain type. Outcome data such as
recurrence, hospitalization, and death are also captured.
This surveillance project has contributed substantially to the current understanding of CDI
epidemiology in the United States. A recently published analysis of CDI surveillance data
estimated that ≈453,000 CDI cases and 29,000 deaths occurred among patients with CDI in the
United States in 2011 (9). Data from this surveillance project have also been used to evaluate
differences in CDI incidence across EIP sites and have illustrated the importance of adjusting for
patient factors (e.g., age, gender, and race) and hospital factors (e.g., inpatient days and use of
nucleic acid amplification tests [NAAT]) for comparisons among populations (10). Data from
EIP CDI surveillance have also shown substantial increases in CDI detection because
laboratories have adopted NAAT for CDI diagnosis (11). EIP surveillance data have also enabled
additional advances in the characterization of CDI: identification of outpatient health care
exposures (e.g., doctor or dentist visits) among patients with community-associated CDI (12);
description of the epidemiology of CDI in children, in whom most disease is community
associated (13); evidence of the association between the North American pulsed-field gel
electrophoresis type 1 epidemic C. difficile strain and more severe CDI outcomes (14); and
description of the association between adoption of NAAT by clinical laboratories and
implementation of stricter criteria for submitting stool specimens for testing (15). The CDI
surveillance data are also used to estimate potential effects of reducing antimicrobial drug use on
CDI rates (16), to estimate the incidence and outcome of CDI infection in nursing home
populations (17), and to evaluate risk factors for community-associated infection. Ongoing
surveillance will also enable measurement of outcomes of prevention efforts associated with
inpatient antimicrobial drug stewardship or, potentially, with a CDI vaccine.
The third HAIC activity surveillance project targets multidrug-resistant gram-negative bacilli
(MDR GNB). This project, known as the Multisite Gram-Negative Bacilli Surveillance Initiative
(MuGSI), began in Georgia and Minnesota in 2010 as pilot projects and expanded to Oregon in
2011. The impetus for initiating population-based EIP surveillance for MDR GNB was the
emergence of CRE in the United States. Patients infected with these organisms have few or
sometimes no antimicrobial drug treatment options. The incidence and characteristics of MDR
GNB are in flux, so a flexible yet specific surveillance program is needed. The program must be
able to adapt to changing laboratory breakpoints and case definitions when needed to better
define the impact of these infections, determine the populations at risk, and inform prevention
efforts.
The main objective of MuGSI is to describe the epidemiology and population-based incidence of
carbapenem-nonsusceptible Enterobacteriaceae species and Acinetobacter baumannii. The
project also seeks to characterize isolates and describe resistance mechanisms among a subset of
carbapenem-nonsusceptible Enterobacteriaceae isolates submitted to CDC. This surveillance has
expanded in recent years to cover a surveillance area of ≈15 million persons in 8 states: Georgia,
Oregon, Minnesota, Colorado, Maryland, New Mexico, New York and Tennessee. Initially,
cases were defined by carbapenem-nonsusceptible (excluding ertapenem) and extended-spectrum
cephalosporin-resistant Escherichia coli, Enterobacter aerogenes, and E. cloacae, Klebsiella
pneumoniae and K. oxytoca, and carbapenem-nonsusceptible (excluding ertapenem)
Acinetobacter baumannii complex isolated from normally sterile sites or from urine of residents
in the surveillance areas. In MuGSI surveillance, most cases are identified through queries of
automated susceptibility-testing instruments in clinical laboratories that serve the catchment
areas rather than through routine output of summarized test results (often called line listings)
generated by laboratory information systems (18). This method enables the application of case
definitions based on antimicrobial drug susceptibility test results that may be suppressed from
routine reports entered into the patient’s medical record. Also, depending on the concentration
range of drugs tested, the method enables application of the latest breakpoints from the Clinical
Laboratory Standards Institute (http://www.clsi.org/) before they have been widely implemented
by clinical laboratories. Isolates from EIP sites are being used to evaluate different phenotypic
definitions used to identify carbapenemase-producing CRE (19). Data from this evaluation have
assisted in modifying CRE definitions used for reporting to NHSN and for updating the MuGSI
case definition. Finally, MuGSI is uniquely positioned to describe persons with community-
associated CRE.
Since its inception, the HAIC activity has also conducted several projects in epidemiology
innovations, a major area of growth for the HAIC activity. The largest of these projects is a
multicenter HAI and antimicrobial drug use prevalence survey project. This multiphase effort is
designed to fill gaps in data collected through NHSN by developing and conducting a national-
scale point prevalence survey that estimates the scope and magnitude of all HAIs affecting acute-
care hospital patients. This project also describes the nature of and rationale for antimicrobial use
in acute care hospitals. The project development began in 2009 with a single-city pilot survey
(20). A limited roll-out survey was conducted in 22 hospitals in the 10 EIP sites in 2010,
followed by the full-scale survey in 183 hospitals across the 10 sites in 2011. Data from the full-
scale survey were used to establish the current annual estimates of HAIs in US acute-care
hospitals: ≈722,000 infections in 648,000 patients (21). The survey showed that surgical site
infections and pneumonias were the most common HAIs and also that device-associated
infections, which have for many years been the focus of most HAI prevention efforts, accounted
for only 26% of all HAIs. C. difficile was the most common pathogen causing HAIs; considering
the importance of antimicrobial drug use in the epidemiology of CDI, this finding supports
CDC’s increasing focus on antimicrobial stewardship programs in acute-care hospitals. The
antimicrobial drug use component of the survey showed that half of all patients included in the
survey were receiving antimicrobial drugs at the time of the survey; furthermore, broad-spectrum
antimicrobial drug use was very common, even among patients with community-onset infections
and among patients who were not in critical care units (22).
The next phase of the prevalence survey, scheduled for 2015, includes a hospital infection
control and antimicrobial stewardship practices questionnaire; it also has assessments of the
quality of antimicrobial drug prescribing for selected clinical scenarios. The prevalence survey is
an effective approach for obtaining broad, situational awareness of HAIs and antimicrobial drug
use in different health care settings, particularly those settings where robust, prospective
surveillance is not yet available or widely used. These surveys have been used in many other
countries, including a European Union survey conducted in 2011–2012 (23). The methods for
the US survey effort were developed with input from European colleagues, including those in the
European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, in an attempt to enable comparative
metrics. We also relied on European colleagues’ considerable experience in conducting HAI and
antimicrobial use prevalence surveys in long-term care facilities (24). We consulted them for
input on a pilot EIP HAIC antimicrobial drug use prevalence survey for nursing home HAIs.
This pilot was conducted in 9 nursing homes in 4 EIP sites, and expansion to a larger-scale, US
nursing home survey in the future is being considered.
Other innovations projects have sought to field-test streamlined, simplified methods for
conducting HAI surveillance in NHSN. One example of these short-term innovations projects is
a device-associated HAI denominator data simplification project to identify streamlined
sampling methods that can replace daily collection of patient- and device-day data ( 25,26). Other
innovations projects include field-testing of a new surveillance component for CDI and urinary
tract infections (UTIs) in long-term care facilities and field-testing of a definition modification of
bloodstream infections associated with central lines (27). Another innovations project is
surveillance for bloodstream infections in dialysis facilities (28). EIP sites have also completed
work to validate data submitted to NHSN. For example, the Connecticut and New Mexico EIP
sites have compared MRSA bacteremia and CDI data collected through EIP’s population-based
surveillance with MRSA and CDI Laboratory-Identified Event data
(http://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/labid-calculator/index.html) submitted to NHSN (29). Knowledge
gained through these EIP projects has directly affected several NHSN surveillance operations: in
2015, implementation of surveillance of central line–associated bloodstream infection and
catheter-associated urinary tract infection denominator sampling methods
(http://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/acute-care-hospital/clabsi/index.html); also in 2015, the addition of
selected variables to Laboratory-Identified Event reporting to improve the completeness of case
information capturing; in 2014, implementation of the Mucosal Barrier Injury-Laboratory
Confirmed Bloodstream Infection definition; and in 2013, clarification of UTI surveillance
methods for long-term care facilities.
Data from HAIC activity population-based surveillance projects and from the HAI and
antimicrobial drug use prevalence survey have been critical to the development of recent high-
profile reports. Of the 18 pathogens or pathogen groups included as serious, urgent, or
concerning threats to public health in CDC’s first report on antimicrobial threats in the United
States, discussions of 7 used estimates from HAIC activity data (30). HAIC activity data have
also been used to illustrate concepts in public health calls to action in CDC reports: on CDIs
(75% of cases had infection occurring outside of hospitals) (31), on CREs (92% of CRE episodes
occurred in patients with health-care exposures) (32), and on the public health problem of
incorrect inpatient antimicrobial drug use (37% of antimicrobial drug prescribing in selected
scenarios could be improved) (16). In addition, data from candidemia surveillance were used in
the World Health Organization’s first global report on antimicrobial resistance (33).
The accomplishments of the EIP HAIC activity have been numerous over a relatively short
period of time, including delivery of data that have affected federal policy, programs, and
operational approaches of HAI surveillance and prevention. However, as the landscape of HAI
and antimicrobial drug–resistant infection prevention changes, the HAIC activity must constantly
reassess priorities and direction. Reporting requirements related to HAIs as part of the Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services quality reporting programs have expanded in recent years;
data from the HAI and antimicrobial drug use prevalence survey show that ≈28% of all acute
care hospital–related HAIs are now part of the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting Program of
the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-
Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/HospitalRHQDAPU.html). The
flexibility of the HAIC activity makes it well suited to fill gaps in facility-specific reporting as
part of those programs, to contribute data on hospital HAIs not included in reporting programs,
and to provide data on the large proportion of infections caused by health care–associated
pathogens that occur outside acute care hospital settings. For example, as reporting to NHSN
becomes increasingly robust for particular hospital-onset infections, the HAIC activity can adapt
its surveillance approach to focus on cases in nonacute care or community settings, locations
where high quality data would otherwise be lacking. Thus, the HAIC activity can provide an
infrastructure that enables evaluation of progress of prevention efforts.
As reporting requirements become part of nonacute care settings, including long-term care or
ambulatory care, the EIP HAIC activity will be well positioned to help determine selection of the
highest-priority infection metrics in those settings. Periodic assessment of the spectrum of HAIs
through time-limited activities, such as the point-prevalence surveys, will help CDC reassess
priority infections for prevention efforts and determine needed modifications to reporting
requirements for various types of health care facilities. Over the next decade, the HAIC activity
can serve to identify new and emerging challenges involving HAIs occurring across the spectrum
of health care delivery.
The HAIC activity can also continue to develop new techniques and respond to emerging and
urgent issues related to HAI surveillance and antimicrobial resistance. With knowledgeable,
state-based staff and existing networks in health care facilities and clinical microbiology
laboratories, the HAIC activity can explore novel approaches to HAI tracking, accommodate
shifting case definitions and approaches to defining antimicrobial resistance, and contribute
valuable data to inform development and implementation of optimal definitions through ongoing
collection and study of isolates linked to well-defined cases of infection.
Besides these functions, the HAIC activity provides an infrastructure for evaluating approaches
to the prevention of HAIs and the spread of antimicrobial resistance by building on research and
innovations tested and refined in smaller-scale or academic settings. The activity’s surveillance
projects have firmly established outcome metrics and can therefore measure patient-centered
outcomes after early adoption of new standards in HAI prevention efforts in acute or long-term
care settings (e.g., the effects of hospital-based programs to reduce CDI in postdischarge
settings). One challenge facing the HAIC activity in implementing these evaluations is the
population-based nature of many of its surveillance projects. Currently, cases are defined in part
on the basis of residency in the designated catchment area, and new approaches to enable capture
of nonresident cases will be needed, particularly for work focused in acute care hospitals.
During the past 5 years, the HAIC activity infrastructure has adapted quickly to new challenges,
additional pathogens, and new methods to accomplish its mission. Given the scope of the
antimicrobial resistance problem and the aggressive timeline laid out in the US President’s
September 2014 Executive Order
(https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/09/18/executive-order-combating-antibiotic-
resistant-bacteria), the pace of work will need to be accelerated to make progress in reaching the
targets outlined in the National Strategy for Combating Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria (34). These
targets include large reductions in incidence of multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa,
invasive MRSA, CDI, and CRE. Through the EIP HAIC activity, CDC will be better and more
rapidly able to identify populations at risk for antimicrobial drug–resistant infections associated
with health care settings, to evaluate and refine prevention approaches, and to define critical
links between disease severity or prevention and microbe characteristics. Furthermore, this
program will serve as one of several that will assess the success of various components of the
National Strategy towards achieving targets and providing data to empower public health and
health care sectors to make progress toward eliminating HAIs.
Dr. Magill is a Captain with the US Public Health Service at CDC and the Medical Director of
the EIP Healthcare-Associated Infections Community Interface activity. Her research interests
include surveillance and estimation of infections associated with health care in various patient
populations, transplant-related infections, and antimicrobial drug resistance.
Acknowledgment
We thank the many persons who contributed to this work: personnel in each of the 10 Emerging
Infections Program sites, those in health care facilities and laboratories in the EIP site catchment
areas or those serving the EIP site catchment areas, and laboratory and program staff at the CDC.
We also thank Mary Brandt, Sandra Bulens, Angela Cleveland, Alice Guh, Fernanda Lessa, and
Nicola Thompson for their review of sections of the manuscript.
References
DOI: 10.3201/eid2109.150508
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