To the Editors:
The emergence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) tuberculosis (TB), defined as in vitro resistance to isoniazid and rifampicin, and extensively drug-resistant (XDR)-TB, defined as in vitro drug resistance to isoniazid and rifampicin plus any fluoroquinolone and at least one of the injectable drugs (amikacin, capreomycin or kanamycin), represents a major threat to TB control at the global level [1–5]. XDR-TB is a manmade product, resulting, in essence, from clinical mismanagement of newly diagnosed susceptible and resistant TB cases [2–5]. Moreover, existing MDR/XDR-TB cases must be promptly detected and treated, and the transmission from infectious source cases has to be prevented, particularly in nosocomial settings [2–6].
The World Health Organization (WHO), in its Stop TB Strategy [7] and its recent Policy on Infection Control [8], clearly underlines the importance of implementing effective measures of infection control in clinical facilities managing TB and MDR-TB patients. At present, no international study is available to investigate how infection control measures are implemented in healthcare facilities managing TB patients.
The aim of the present study was to document how infection control measures are implemented in selected settings in the European Union, focusing on national MDR/XDR-TB reference centres.
A standardised and comprehensive survey tool was developed, as discussed previously [9, 10]. In summary, the tool consisted of items covering the key areas that a panel of experts considered adequate to evaluate TB infection control in the selected countries. A Delphi process was used to identify the key elements belonging to infection control, and to assign priorities to the questions proposed and define a weighted score to the answers obtained. The items relate to individual patients (risk factors for MDR-TB) and institutional factors (table 1).
The final version of the tool was composed of three parts and one annex: part 1 summarised the features of the setting surveyed (62 items); part 2 collected information on individual clinical records surveyed (one line per clinical case; 141 items); and part 3 allowed comparison of the key case management decisions taken on each individual case against internationally agreed standards (25 scored questions). The international reference standards used to define the highest-standard practice for comparison were derived from the WHO Policy on Infection Control [8] and the International Standards for Tuberculosis Care document [11].
The tool was applied to each individual original patient record examined, and adherence/nonadherence entered on the electronic data collection sheet and, finally, a score. The survey teams, including clinical and public health experts, were trained to use the tool, define adherence/nonadherence to standards and assign the score.
The original records of 40 TB/MDR-TB cases were assessed at each study site, including 30 MDR-TB and 10 other than MDR-TB cases (i.e. the strain being susceptible, monoresistant or polyresistant), between November 2009 and March 2010. The clinical files of the cases to survey were selected by the study site counterparts before the visit, following a time criterion (cases treated since January 1, 2005) for a simple random sampling.
The TB reference institutions, identified in collaboration with national health authorities (ministries of health), were identified in five countries illustrative of the different TB epidemiology patterns in Europe (table 1). As per ECDC policy, the selected countries cannot be disclosed.
Categorical variables were compared by Chi-squared or Fisher’s exact tests where appropriate. A p-value of ≤0.05 was deemed statistically significant. Data were analysed using Stata 11.0 (StataCorp, College Station, TX, USA).
The main findings are described in table 1. 40 medical records were assessed per country.
Individual risk factors were generally well documented: investigation of previous TB diagnosis was performed in 186 (93%) out of 200 TB cases admitted to the reference centres, although only 160 (80%) out of 200 of their contacts were investigated, which is potentially relevant from a public health perspective.
Although healthcare workers were sufficiently protected in the majority of cases (199 (99.5%) out of 200 cases) and respirators were always available (200 (100%) out of 200 cases), 40 (20%) out of 200 cases were not educated on cough etiquette and other important infection control issues.
No negative-pressure room (including a ventilation system designed so that air flows from the corridors, or any adjacent area, into the negative-pressure room, ensuring that contaminated air cannot escape from the negative-pressure room to other parts of the facility) was identified in four out of five surveyed centres.
Furthermore, specialised training in infection control and healthcare epidemiology was not offered to the individuals employed in the centres surveyed by professional organisations or scientific societies, and respirator fitting was never tested. No specific programme for the implementation of good infection control practice was in place. A surveillance system for monitoring mycobacterial drug resistance covered all cases, although an infection control committee was in place at the time of admission for 160 (80%) out of 200 cases.
The reference centre located in the group 5 country exemplified the main shortcomings: the proportions scored on investigation of previous TB diagnosis, contact investigation, infection control committee, cough etiquette and staff training were significantly lower (p<0.05) than those in the other countries. Environmental measures (i.e. methods used to decrease the quantity of droplet nuclei and to control their direction in the air) were inadequate in group 2 and 5 countries (p<0.001).
The main area of concern was the lack of a comprehensive infection control strategy or plan in all the centres surveyed, reflecting a lack of central-level planning [9]. Administrative measures (infection control committees) were not systematically in place. A plan is a key instrument to activating and empowering the necessary committees, and ensuring that the key infection control activities are implemented and evaluated. The pitfalls identified in the areas of training and health education would benefit from the implementation of infection control plans at the facility level. The lack of planning at the facility level reflects a lack of planning at the central level on this given issue.
In terms of personal protection, although respirators were in place and used by staff, and surgical masks by patients, respirator fit was not tested in any of the centres. It is known that a proportion of staff do not pass respirator fit testing, due to inadequate positioning of the respirator [12]. A respirator placed wrongly on the mouth and nose offers a false sense of security, and a lack of real protection from Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection cannot be excluded [9, 12].
The lack of negative-pressure ventilation in all but one of the centres surveyed deserves a special discussion. Sufficient respiratory isolation rooms for all new patients admitted (at least until the exact resistance pattern is identified and/or the patient is rendered noninfectious) and adequate isolation procedures need to be available in centres diagnosing and treating TB. Although a lack of negative-pressure ventilation rooms, even for MDR-TB cases, has been identified, no evidence was found that this caused secondary cases among healthcare staff (e.g. a single TB case was identified in one country over a 10-yr period as a result of this survey). A critical review of the available evidence and clear recommendations on this procedure seem to be justified.
According to the results of this survey, administrative and personal protection measures (e.g. masks for patients or respirators for healthcare staff) should be scaled up, as they are relevant in preventing secondary TB cases among staff. Furthermore, adequate health education practices for patients (e.g. cough etiquette) coupled with regular training of staff are necessary to ensure good infection control results.
The results of our study clearly demonstrate that even in European MDR/XDR-TB reference centres, infection control measures do not fully comply with international recommendations and margins exist for prompt public health action aiming at minimising TB transmission in nosocomial settings.
Footnotes
Support Statement
The research leading to this publication has been performed under the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) service contract 1757 adjudicated to TBNET following open tender competition.
Statement of Interest
None declared.
- ©ERS 2011