TY - JOUR
T1 - Burkholderia stabilis outbreak associated with contaminated commercially-available washing gloves, Switzerland, may 2015 to august 2016
AU - Swissnoso
AU - Sommerstein, Rami
AU - Führer, Urs
AU - Priore, Elia Lo
AU - Casanova, Carlo
AU - Meinel, Dominik M.
AU - Seth-Smith, Helena M.B.
AU - Kronenberg, Andreas
AU - Koch, Daniel
AU - Senn, Laurence
AU - Widmer, Andreas F.
AU - Egli, Adrian
AU - Marschall, Jonas
AU - Burnens, A.
AU - Suisse, Synlab
AU - Cherkaoui, A.
AU - Corradi, C.
AU - Dubuis, O.
AU - Gaia, V.
AU - Leib, S. L.
AU - Nordmann, P.
AU - Perreten, V.
AU - Piffaretti, J. C.
AU - Prod’Hom, G.
AU - Schrenzel, J.
AU - Zanetti, G.
AU - Zbinden, R.
AU - Balmelli, Carlo
AU - Eisenring, Marie Christine
AU - Harbarth, Stephan
AU - Kuster, Stefan
AU - Spicher, Virginie Masserey
AU - Pittet, Didier
AU - Ruef, Christian
AU - Sax, Hugo
AU - Schlegel, Matthias
AU - Schweiger, Alexander
AU - Troillet, Nicolas
AU - Widmer, Andreas
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The authors, 2017.
PY - 2017/12/7
Y1 - 2017/12/7
N2 - We describe an outbreak of Burkholderia stabilis associated with contaminated washing gloves, a commercially available Class I medical device. Triggered by an increase in Burkholderia cepacia complex (BCC) bacteremias and the detection of BCC in unopened packages of washing gloves, an ad hoc national outbreak committee comprising representatives of a public health organisation, a regulatory agency, and an expert association convened and commissioned an outbreak investigation. The investigation included retrospective case finding across Switzerland and whole genome sequencing (WGS) of isolates from cases and gloves. The investigation revealed that BCC were detected in clinical samples of 46 cases aged 17 to 91 years (33% females) from nine institutions between May 2015 and August 2016. Twenty-two isolates from case patients and 16 from washing gloves underwent WGS. All available outbreak isolates clustered within a span of < 19 differing alleles, while 13 unrelated clinical isolates differed by > 1,500 alleles. This BCC outbreak was rapidly identified, communicated, investigated and halted by an ad hoc collaboration of multiple stakeholders. WGS served as useful tool for confirming the source of the outbreak. This outbreak also highlights current regulatory limitations regarding Class I medical devices and the usefulness of a nationally coordinated outbreak response.
AB - We describe an outbreak of Burkholderia stabilis associated with contaminated washing gloves, a commercially available Class I medical device. Triggered by an increase in Burkholderia cepacia complex (BCC) bacteremias and the detection of BCC in unopened packages of washing gloves, an ad hoc national outbreak committee comprising representatives of a public health organisation, a regulatory agency, and an expert association convened and commissioned an outbreak investigation. The investigation included retrospective case finding across Switzerland and whole genome sequencing (WGS) of isolates from cases and gloves. The investigation revealed that BCC were detected in clinical samples of 46 cases aged 17 to 91 years (33% females) from nine institutions between May 2015 and August 2016. Twenty-two isolates from case patients and 16 from washing gloves underwent WGS. All available outbreak isolates clustered within a span of < 19 differing alleles, while 13 unrelated clinical isolates differed by > 1,500 alleles. This BCC outbreak was rapidly identified, communicated, investigated and halted by an ad hoc collaboration of multiple stakeholders. WGS served as useful tool for confirming the source of the outbreak. This outbreak also highlights current regulatory limitations regarding Class I medical devices and the usefulness of a nationally coordinated outbreak response.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85037689141&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2017.22.49.17-00213
DO - 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2017.22.49.17-00213
M3 - Article
C2 - 29233255
AN - SCOPUS:85037689141
SN - 1025-496X
VL - 22
JO - Eurosurveillance
JF - Eurosurveillance
IS - 49
M1 - 17-00213
ER -