A mathematical model of Clostridium difficile transmission in medical wards and a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing different strategies for laboratory diagnosis and patient isolation.

BACKGROUND:Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is a common and potentially fatal healthcare-associated infection. Improving diagnostic tests and infection control measures may prevent transmission. We aimed to determine, in resource-limited settings, whether it is more effective and cost-effective...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vered Schechner, Yehuda Carmeli, Moshe Leshno
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5302372?pdf=render
id doaj-6e595c9a688044e6a20ddfe87a8a56fc
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6e595c9a688044e6a20ddfe87a8a56fc2020-11-24T22:20:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01122e017132710.1371/journal.pone.0171327A mathematical model of Clostridium difficile transmission in medical wards and a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing different strategies for laboratory diagnosis and patient isolation.Vered SchechnerYehuda CarmeliMoshe LeshnoBACKGROUND:Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is a common and potentially fatal healthcare-associated infection. Improving diagnostic tests and infection control measures may prevent transmission. We aimed to determine, in resource-limited settings, whether it is more effective and cost-effective to allocate resources to isolation or to diagnostics. METHODS:We constructed a mathematical model of CDI transmission based on hospital data (9 medical wards, 350 beds) between March 2010 and February 2013. The model consisted of three compartments: susceptible patients, asymptomatic carriers and CDI patients. We used our model results to perform a cost-effectiveness analysis, comparing four strategies that were different combinations of 2 test methods (the two-step test and uniform PCR) and 2 infection control measures (contact isolation in multiple-bed rooms or single-bed rooms/cohorting). For each strategy, we calculated the annual cost (of CDI diagnosis and isolation) for a decrease of 1 in the average daily number of CDI patients; the strategy of the two-step test and contact isolation in multiple-bed rooms was the reference strategy. RESULTS:Our model showed that the average number of CDI patients increased exponentially as the transmission rate increased. Improving diagnosis by adopting uniform PCR assay reduced the average number of CDI cases per day per 350 beds from 9.4 to 8.5, while improving isolation by using single-bed rooms reduced the number to about 1; the latter was cost saving. CONCLUSIONS:CDI can be decreased by better isolation and more sensitive laboratory methods. From the hospital perspective, improving isolation is more cost-effective than improving diagnostics.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5302372?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vered Schechner
Yehuda Carmeli
Moshe Leshno
spellingShingle Vered Schechner
Yehuda Carmeli
Moshe Leshno
A mathematical model of Clostridium difficile transmission in medical wards and a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing different strategies for laboratory diagnosis and patient isolation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Vered Schechner
Yehuda Carmeli
Moshe Leshno
author_sort Vered Schechner
title A mathematical model of Clostridium difficile transmission in medical wards and a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing different strategies for laboratory diagnosis and patient isolation.
title_short A mathematical model of Clostridium difficile transmission in medical wards and a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing different strategies for laboratory diagnosis and patient isolation.
title_full A mathematical model of Clostridium difficile transmission in medical wards and a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing different strategies for laboratory diagnosis and patient isolation.
title_fullStr A mathematical model of Clostridium difficile transmission in medical wards and a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing different strategies for laboratory diagnosis and patient isolation.
title_full_unstemmed A mathematical model of Clostridium difficile transmission in medical wards and a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing different strategies for laboratory diagnosis and patient isolation.
title_sort mathematical model of clostridium difficile transmission in medical wards and a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing different strategies for laboratory diagnosis and patient isolation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description BACKGROUND:Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is a common and potentially fatal healthcare-associated infection. Improving diagnostic tests and infection control measures may prevent transmission. We aimed to determine, in resource-limited settings, whether it is more effective and cost-effective to allocate resources to isolation or to diagnostics. METHODS:We constructed a mathematical model of CDI transmission based on hospital data (9 medical wards, 350 beds) between March 2010 and February 2013. The model consisted of three compartments: susceptible patients, asymptomatic carriers and CDI patients. We used our model results to perform a cost-effectiveness analysis, comparing four strategies that were different combinations of 2 test methods (the two-step test and uniform PCR) and 2 infection control measures (contact isolation in multiple-bed rooms or single-bed rooms/cohorting). For each strategy, we calculated the annual cost (of CDI diagnosis and isolation) for a decrease of 1 in the average daily number of CDI patients; the strategy of the two-step test and contact isolation in multiple-bed rooms was the reference strategy. RESULTS:Our model showed that the average number of CDI patients increased exponentially as the transmission rate increased. Improving diagnosis by adopting uniform PCR assay reduced the average number of CDI cases per day per 350 beds from 9.4 to 8.5, while improving isolation by using single-bed rooms reduced the number to about 1; the latter was cost saving. CONCLUSIONS:CDI can be decreased by better isolation and more sensitive laboratory methods. From the hospital perspective, improving isolation is more cost-effective than improving diagnostics.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5302372?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT veredschechner amathematicalmodelofclostridiumdifficiletransmissioninmedicalwardsandacosteffectivenessanalysiscomparingdifferentstrategiesforlaboratorydiagnosisandpatientisolation
AT yehudacarmeli amathematicalmodelofclostridiumdifficiletransmissioninmedicalwardsandacosteffectivenessanalysiscomparingdifferentstrategiesforlaboratorydiagnosisandpatientisolation
AT mosheleshno amathematicalmodelofclostridiumdifficiletransmissioninmedicalwardsandacosteffectivenessanalysiscomparingdifferentstrategiesforlaboratorydiagnosisandpatientisolation
AT veredschechner mathematicalmodelofclostridiumdifficiletransmissioninmedicalwardsandacosteffectivenessanalysiscomparingdifferentstrategiesforlaboratorydiagnosisandpatientisolation
AT yehudacarmeli mathematicalmodelofclostridiumdifficiletransmissioninmedicalwardsandacosteffectivenessanalysiscomparingdifferentstrategiesforlaboratorydiagnosisandpatientisolation
AT mosheleshno mathematicalmodelofclostridiumdifficiletransmissioninmedicalwardsandacosteffectivenessanalysiscomparingdifferentstrategiesforlaboratorydiagnosisandpatientisolation
_version_ 1725777086570823680