The study EPICS-6 consists of three study phases. Emergency Department patients are screened for nasal and pharyngeal colonisation with Methicillin sensitive and Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA/MRSA) using a point-of-care (POC)-PCR-testing method (cobas®LIAT®-System, Roche Molecular Systems Inc.) The first aim of this study is to describe the prevalence of MSSA/MRSA-colonisation in a routine cohort of Emergency Department patients. The second aim is to determine the impact of POC-guided decolonisation as compared to conventional laboratory testing on in-hospital infection rates with MSSA/MRSA in a pre-post-comparison study.
The study EPICS-6 consists of three study phases. In phase one the novel POC-PCR-testing method for MSSA/MRSA-proof (cobas®LIAT®-System, Roche Molecular Systems Inc.) is technically established and integrated in Emergency Department procedures. After evaluation of processes and sample handling the second phase of this study assesses the prevalence of positive MSSA/MRSA-POC-testing in the general ED-population and in different risk groups. Based on the results of the previous study phases, the final phase comprises an interventional pre-post-comparison study. The interventional study assesses the impact of POC-result guided early decolonisation of MSSA/MRSA-colonized patients on in-hospital infection rates with MSSA/MRSA.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
1,000
Patients receive nasal Octinidin treatment and skin washings for five consecutive days
Charité Universitätsmedizin - Berlin
Berlin, Germany
RECRUITINGMSSA/MRSA prevalence in a general ED-population
number of patients with a positive POC-test result for nasal/oral MSSA/MRSA
Time frame: on admission to the ED
MSSA/MRSA in-hospital infection rates
number of in-hospital MSSA/MRSA infections in patients with known nasal/oral colonization with MSSA/MRSA. This outcome measure will be assessed for the time period between admission and discharge from hospital for up to 90 days after study inclusion. It will be assessed by routine MSSA/MRSA in-hospital testing and the respective test results will be retrieved from the hospital Information system.
Time frame: at discharge from hospital for up to 90 days after admission
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