Volume 119, Issue 3 , Pages 275.e15-275.e23, March 2006
Evaluating the Probability of Previously Unknown Carriage of MRSA at Hospital Admission
Abstract
Purpose
We determined the prevalence and risk profile of patients with previously unknown carriage of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) at hospital admission.
Subjects and methods
We conducted a 7-month, prospective case-controlled study in adult inpatients admitted to a university hospital with endemic MRSA. Multivariate conditional logistic regression for data sets matched 1:4 was performed to identify the risk profile of newly identified MRSA carriers.
Results
Overall, 399 of 12
072 screened admissions (prevalence, 3.3%) were found colonized (n = 368, 92%) or infected (n = 31, 8%) with MRSA. In 204 cases (prevalence, 1.7%), MRSA carriage was newly identified. Without screening on admission, 49% (196/399) of MRSA carriers would have been missed. We identified nine independent risk factors for newly identified MRSA carriage at admission (adjusted odds ratio): male sex (1.9); age greater than 75 years (2.0); receipt of fluoroquinolones (2.7), cephalosporins (2.1), and carbapenems (3.2) in the last 6 months; previous hospitalization (1.9) or intravenous therapy (1.7) during the last 12 months; urinary catheter at admission (2.0); and intrahospital transfer (2.4). A risk score (range, 0-13) was calculated by adding points assigned to these variables. On the basis of analysis of 1006 patients included in the case-controlled study, the probability of MRSA carriage was 8% (28/342) in patients with a low score (≤1), 19% (92/482) in patients with an intermediate score (2-4), and 46% (84/182) in patients with a high score (≥5). The risk score had good discrimination (c-statistic, 0.73) and showed excellent calibration (P = .88).
Conclusions
On-admission prevalence of previously unknown MRSA carriers was high. Applying the risk score to newly admitted patients with an intermediate or high probability of MRSA carriage could allow a more effective MRSA control strategy.
Keywords: Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus , Prevalence , Infection control , Prediction , Admission
This study was supported by an Institutional Grant of the University of Geneva Hospitals (CI 70897).
PII: S0002-9343(05)00552-8
doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2005.04.042
© 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 119, Issue 3 , Pages 275.e15-275.e23, March 2006

