Using electronic health records to assess the relationship between colonization pressure and nosocomial pathogen acquisition
Luke Sagers, Ziming Wei, Caroline McKenna, Christina Chan, Anna A. Agan, Theodore R. Pak, Chanu Rhee, Michael Klompas, Sanjat Kanjilal

TL;DR
This study uses electronic health records to show how the presence of bacteria among hospitalized patients affects infection risk, using an open-source tool to track colonization pressure.
Contribution
The paper introduces an open-source informatics tool to model colonization pressure's impact on nosocomial pathogen acquisition using real-time electronic health records.
Findings
Colonization pressure consistently correlates with nosocomial acquisition of pathogens, regardless of drug resistance.
Positive associations were found between colonization pressure of one organism and acquisition of another, distinct organism.
Negative associations were observed between organisms inhabiting different niches.
Abstract
Hospitalized patients are at risk for developing hospital acquired infections. Active surveillance for bacterial colonization is effective at preventing infection but is resource-intensive and limited to high-risk units and a subset of high-risk pathogens. Colonization pressure, defined as the prevalence of an organism among ward co-occupants, has been associated with hospital acquired infection and can be calculated in real-time using data in the electronic health record, but its use by infection control programs has been limited. As a proof-of-concept study, we built an open source informatics tool to model the impact of colonization pressure on nosocomial acquisition for a wide range of drug susceptible and resistant pathogens using electronic health record data from a large integrated health system in the Northeast United States, collected between May 2015 and July 2024. Using a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfection Control in Healthcare · Antimicrobial Resistance in Staphylococcus · Nosocomial Infections in ICU
