- Sansom, Sarah E;
- Gussin, Gabrielle M;
- Schoeny, Michael;
- Singh, Raveena D;
- Adil, Hira;
- Bell, Pamela;
- Benson, Ellen C;
- Bittencourt, Cassiana E;
- Black, Stephanie;
- Del Mar Villanueva Guzman, Maria;
- Froilan, Mary Carl;
- Fukuda, Christine;
- Barsegyan, Karina;
- Gough, Ellen;
- Lyman, Meghan;
- Makhija, Jinal;
- Marron, Stefania;
- Mikhail, Lydia;
- Noble-Wang, Judith;
- Pacilli, Massimo;
- Pedroza, Robert;
- Saavedra, Raheeb;
- Sexton, D Joseph;
- Shimabukuro, Julie;
- Thotapalli, Lahari;
- Zahn, Matthew;
- Huang, Susan S;
- Hayden, Mary K
Background
Environmental contamination is suspected to play an important role in Candida auris transmission. Understanding speed and risks of contamination after room disinfection could inform environmental cleaning recommendations.Methods
We conducted a prospective multicenter study of environmental contamination associated with C. auris colonization at six ventilator-capable skilled nursing facilities and one acute-care hospital in Illinois and California. Known C. auris carriers were sampled at five body-sites followed by sampling of nearby room surfaces before disinfection and at 0, 4, 8, and 12-hours post-disinfection. Samples were cultured for C. auris and bacterial multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs). Odds of surface contamination after disinfection were analyzed using multilevel generalized estimating equations.Results
Among 41 known C. auris carriers, colonization was detected most frequently on palms/fingertips (76%) and nares (71%). C. auris contamination was detected on 32.2% (66/205) of room surfaces pre-disinfection and 20.5% (39/190) of room surfaces by 4-hours post-disinfection. A higher number of C. auris-colonized body sites was associated with higher odds of environmental contamination at every time point following disinfection, adjusting for facility of residence. In the rooms of 38 (93%) C. auris carriers co-colonized with a bacterial MDRO, 2%-24% of surfaces were additionally contaminated with the same MDRO by 4-hours post-disinfection.Conclusions
C. auris can contaminate the healthcare environment rapidly after disinfection, highlighting the challenges associated with environmental disinfection. Future research should investigate long-acting disinfectants, antimicrobial surfaces, and more effective patient skin antisepsis to reduce the environmental reservoir of C. auris and bacterial MDROs in healthcare settings.