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Featured researches published by Sondra Seiler.


American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 1998

Tuberculosis infection and anergy in hemodialysis patients

Keith F. Woeltje; Allen Mathew; Marcos Rothstein; Sondra Seiler; Victoria J. Fraser

Patients on hemodialysis are at increased risk for developing active tuberculosis (TB) after primary infection. Although this increased risk is well documented, the prevalence of TB infection, as indicated by a positive tuberculin skin test (TST), is not well described. End-stage renal disease is also known to be a risk factor for skin test anergy, but the rate of anergy in hemodialysis patients is unclear. We sought to identify rates of anergy and TST positivity in patients at four hemodialysis units in St Louis, Missouri, from June 1996 through August 1996. Data obtained from patients and medical records included age, years on hemodialysis, medical history, and basic laboratory data. Patients without a history of TB or a positive TST had a TST with Tubersol, as well as candida and tetanus controls, placed by the Mantoux method. Tests were read 48 hours later. Of the patients enrolled at these units, 307 of 331 (93%) were evaluated. Patients had a mean age of 58 years (range, 19 to 91 years) and had been on hemodialysis for a mean of 3.7 years (range, 1 week to 18.7 years). Blacks made up 81% of the population. A history of a positive TST was obtained from 24 patients (8%), and an additional seven (2%) had a history of active TB. Of the 276 patients tested, 93 did not respond to either control antigen, but five of these patients had a positive TST, leaving 88 (32%) anergic. Anergy was related to age, immunosuppressive drug use, and the reagents used, but not to urea reduction ratio. Positive TSTs were found in 17 of 188 of nonanergic patients (9%) (6% of all tested patients). Overall, 48 of 307 patients (16%) had a positive TST or history of TB. TB or a positive TST was associated with liver disease and peptic ulcer disease, but not socioeconomic status. All 17 newly identified TST-positive patients received chest radiographs. No new cases of active TB were found. Only two of 17 of these patients (12%) were started on isoniazid (INH) prophylaxis. We identified high rates of TST positivity and anergy in the hemodialysis patients tested. Hemodialysis patients should receive regular TST screening, and INH prophylaxis needs to be more strongly encouraged. Studies are ongoing to define the rate of TST conversion over time.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2014

Prevalence and Risk Factors for Asymptomatic Clostridium difficile Carriage

Faisal Alasmari; Sondra Seiler; Tiffany Hink; Carey-Ann D. Burnham; Erik R. Dubberke

BACKGROUND Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) incidence has increased dramatically over the last decade. Recent studies suggest that asymptomatic carriers may be an important reservoir of C. difficile in healthcare settings. We sought to identify the prevalence and risk factors for asymptomatic C. difficile carriage on admission to the hospital. METHODS Patients admitted to Barnes-Jewish Hospital without diarrhea were enrolled from June 2010 through October 2011. Demographic information and healthcare and medication exposures 90 days prior to admission were collected. Stool specimens or rectal swabs were collected within 48 hours of admission and stored at -30°C until cultured. Clostridium difficile isolates were typed and compared with isolates from patients with CDI. RESULTS A stool/swab specimen was obtained for 259 enrolled subjects on admission. Two hundred four (79%) were not colonized, 40 (15%) had toxigenic C. difficile (TCD), and 15 (6%) had nontoxigenic C. difficile. There were no differences between TCD-colonized and -uncolonized subjects for age (mean, 56 vs 58 years; P = .46), comorbidities, admission from another healthcare facility (33% vs 24%; P = .23), or recent hospitalization (50% vs 50%; P = .43). There were no differences in antimicrobial exposures in the 90 days prior to admission (55% vs 56%; P = .91). Asymptomatic carriers were colonized with strains similar to strains from patients with CDI, but the relative proportions were different. CONCLUSIONS There was a high prevalence of TCD colonization on admission. In contrast to past studies, TCD colonization was not associated with recent antimicrobial or healthcare exposures. Additional investigation is needed to determine the role of asymptomatic TCD carriers on hospital-onset CDI incidence.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2003

THE EPIDEMIOLOGY OF VANCOMYCIN-RESISTANT ENTEROCOCCUS COLONIZATION IN A MEDICAL INTENSIVE CARE UNIT

David K. Warren; Marin H. Kollef; Sondra Seiler; Scott K. Fridkin; Victoria J. Fraser

OBJECTIVE To determine the epidemiology of colonization with vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE) among intensive care unit (ICU) patients. DESIGN Ten-month prospective cohort study. SETTING A 19-bed medical ICU of a 1,440-bed teaching hospital. METHODS Patients admitted to the ICU had rectal swab cultures for VRE on admission and weekly thereafter. VRE-positive patients were cared for using contact precautions. Clinical data, including microbiology reports, were collected prospectively during the ICU stay. RESULTS Of 519 patients who had admission stool cultures, 127 (25%) had cultures that were positive for VRE. Risk factors for VRE colonization identified by multiple logistic regression analysis were hospital stay greater than 3 days prior to ICU admission (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 3.6; 95% confidence interval [CI95], 2.3 to 5.7), chronic dialysis (AOR, 2.4; CI95, 1.2 to 4.5), and having been admitted to the study hospital one to two times (AOR, 2.3; CI95, 1.4 to 3.8) or more than two times (AOR, 6.5; CI95, 3.7 to 11.6) within the past 12 months. Of the 352 VRE-negative patients who had one or more follow-up cultures, 74 (21%) became VRE positive during their ICU stay (27 cases per 1,000 patient-ICU days). CONCLUSION The prevalence of VRE culture positivity on ICU admission was high and a sizable fraction of ICU patients became VRE positive during their ICU stay despite contact precautions for VRE-positive patients. This was likely due in large part to prior VRE exposures in the rest of the hospital where these control measures were not being used.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2015

Risk Factors for Acquisition and Loss of Clostridium difficile Colonization in Hospitalized Patients

Erik R. Dubberke; Kimberly A. Reske; Sondra Seiler; Tiffany Hink; Jennie H. Kwon; Carey-Ann D. Burnham

ABSTRACT Asymptomatic colonization may contribute to Clostridium difficile transmission. Few data identify which patients are at risk for colonization. We performed a prospective cohort study of C. difficile colonization and risk factors for C. difficile acquisition and loss in hospitalized patients. Patients admitted to medical or surgical wards at a tertiary care hospital were enrolled; interviews and chart review were performed to determine patient demographics, C. difficile infection (CDI) history, medications, and health care exposures. Stool samples/rectal swabs were collected at enrollment and discharge; stool samples from clinical laboratory tests were also included. Samples were cultured for C. difficile, and the isolates were tested for toxins A and B and ribotyped. Chi-square tests and univariate logistic regression were used for the analyses. Two hundred thirty-five patients were enrolled. Of the patients, 21% were colonized with C. difficile (toxigenic and nontoxigenic) at admission and 24% at discharge. Ribotype 027 accounted for 6% of the strains at admission and 12% at discharge. Of the patients colonized at admission, 78% were also colonized at discharge. Cephalosporin use was associated with C. difficile acquisition (47% of patients who acquired C. difficile versus 25% of patients who did not; P = 0.03). β-lactam–β-lactamase inhibitor combinations were associated with a loss of C. difficile colonization (36% of patients who lost C. difficile colonization versus 8% of patients colonized at both admission and discharge; P = 0.04), as was metronidazole (27% versus 3%; P = 0.03). Antibiotic use affects the epidemiology of asymptomatic C. difficile colonization, including acquisition and loss, and it requires additional study.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1997

Varied approaches to tuberculosis control in a multihospital system.

Keith E. Woeltje; Paul B. L'Ecuyer; Sondra Seiler; Victoria J. Fraser

OBJECTIVES To document the actual tuberculosis (TB) control policies and procedures in a nonoutbreak setting in a variety of hospitals. To determine if any particular practices are linked to higher rates of employee tuberculin skin-test conversion. DESIGN Survey of hospital occupational health and infection control practitioners for the year 1994 regarding hospital TB policies. Review of hospital records to verify the number of patients with TB at each hospital and to verify the number of employees with positive tuberculin skin tests. Smoke-stick testing of negative-pressure ventilation rooms. SETTING A 13-hospital health system in the Midwest. RESULTS Hospitals ranged in size from 40 to 1,208 beds (median 220) and employed 150 to 6,500 workers (median 875). There were seven rural and six urban centers, including four teaching hospitals. All 13 hospitals had TB control plans, and all performed annual tuberculin skin testing on employees. Annual skin-test positivity rates ranged from 0% to 1.0% (median 0.3%). Negative-pressure ventilation rooms were available in 11 hospitals. The percentage of negative-pressure rooms with effective negative pressure ranged from 44% to 100% (median 95%). Three of the 13 hospitals used high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) masks as primary personal respiratory protection, and 8 used dust-mist or dust-mist-fume masks. We found no relation between the type of face mask used, number of functional negative-pressure rooms, or hospital TB risk category, and employee skin-test conversion rates. CONCLUSIONS Considerable variation existed in the TB control policies and procedures between hospitals, but employee TB skin-test conversion rates were low in all settings.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2017

Assessment of healthcare worker protocol deviations and self-contamination during personal protective equipment donning and doffing

Jennie H. Kwon; Carey-Ann D. Burnham; Kimberly A. Reske; Stephen Y. Liang; Tiffany Hink; Meghan Wallace; Angela Shupe; Sondra Seiler; Candice Cass; Victoria J. Fraser; Erik R. Dubberke

OBJECTIVE To evaluate healthcare worker (HCW) risk of self-contamination when donning and doffing personal protective equipment (PPE) using fluorescence and MS2 bacteriophage. DESIGN Prospective pilot study. SETTING Tertiary-care hospital. PARTICIPANTS A total of 36 HCWs were included in this study: 18 donned/doffed contact precaution (CP) PPE and 18 donned/doffed Ebola virus disease (EVD) PPE. INTERVENTIONS HCWs donned PPE according to standard protocols. Fluorescent liquid and MS2 bacteriophage were applied to HCWs. HCWs then doffed their PPE. After doffing, HCWs were scanned for fluorescence and swabbed for MS2. MS2 detection was performed using reverse transcriptase PCR. The donning and doffing processes were videotaped, and protocol deviations were recorded. RESULTS Overall, 27% of EVD PPE HCWs and 50% of CP PPE HCWs made ≥1 protocol deviation while donning, and 100% of EVD PPE HCWs and 67% of CP PPE HCWs made ≥1 protocol deviation while doffing (P=.02). The median number of doffing protocol deviations among EVD PPE HCWs was 4, versus 1 among CP PPE HCWs. Also, 15 EVD PPE protocol deviations were committed by doffing assistants and/or trained observers. Fluorescence was detected on 8 EVD PPE HCWs (44%) and 5 CP PPE HCWs (28%), most commonly on hands. MS2 was recovered from 2 EVD PPE HCWs (11%) and 3 CP PPE HCWs (17%). CONCLUSIONS Protocol deviations were common during both EVD and CP PPE doffing, and some deviations during EVD PPE doffing were committed by the HCW doffing assistant and/or the trained observer. Self-contamination was common. PPE donning/doffing are complex and deserve additional study. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2017;38:1077-1083.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2001

Tuberculin Skin Testing of Physicians at a Midwestern Teaching Hospital: A 6-Year Prospective Study

David K. Warren; Kristin Foley; Louis B. Polish; Sondra Seiler; Victoria J. Fraser

The epidemiology of tuberculin reactivity among physicians practicing in regions of moderate tuberculosis prevalence is unknown. We prospectively assessed the epidemiology of tuberculin skin test (TST) reactivity among physicians in training in St. Louis between 1992 and 1998. Of 1574 physicians who were tested, 267 (17%) had positive TST results. Older age, birth outside of the United States, prior bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccination, and practice in the fields of medicine, anesthesiology, or psychiatry were associated with a positive TST result. Among physicians born in the United States, 63 (5.7%) had positive TST results. Among physicians with > or = 2 documented TSTs, 12 had conversion to a positive TST (1.6%; 1.03 conversions per 100 person-years). Physicians in this study had a high rate of tuberculin reactivity, despite a low conversion rate. The relationship between TST conversion and birth outside of the United States and BCG vaccination suggests a booster phenomenon rather than true new TST conversions.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2015

Randomized Controlled Trial to Determine the Impact of Probiotic Administration on Colonization With Multidrug-Resistant Organisms in Critically Ill Patients.

Jennie H. Kwon; Kerry M. Bommarito; Kimberly A. Reske; Sondra Seiler; Tiffany Hink; Hilary M. Babcock; Marin H. Kollef; Victoria J. Fraser; Carey-Ann D. Burnham; Erik R. Dubberke

This was a randomized controlled pilot study of Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG versus standard of care to prevent gastrointestinal multidrug-resistant organism colonization in intensive care unit patients. Among 70 subjects, there were no significant differences in acquisition or loss of any multidrug-resistant organisms (P>.05) and no probiotic-associated adverse events.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1998

Management and outcome of tuberculosis in two St Louis Hospitals, 1988 to 1994

Paul B. L'Ecuyer; Keith F. Woeltje; Sondra Seiler; Victoria J. Fraser

OBJECTIVE To describe management and outcome of tuberculosis (TB) and current practices for isolation in two urban hospitals in the Midwest. DESIGN Retrospective cohort study. SETTING Barnes Hospital and Jewish Hospital, tertiary-care and community hospitals affiliated with Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis, Missouri. PATIENTS All adult patients with a positive culture for Mycobacterium tuberculosis from 1988 to 1994. RESULTS We identified 122 cases at Barnes and Jewish Hospitals (36.5/100,000 hospital discharges), median age was 59.0 years, 61.5% were non-Caucasian, and 54.9% resided within the city limits. Underlying risk conditions were common: substance abuse (25%), recent TB contact (24%), and foreign birth (13%). Coexistent human immunodeficiency virus infection (8%) was uncommon. Of skin-tested cases, 22% were anergic; of the rest, 22% tested negative. Almost 20% of cases had prior positive skin tests, and thus were preventable, but had not received adequate prophylaxis. Of hospitalized patients with pulmonary TB, 70% received respiratory isolation. Antibiotic resistance was recognized in 16%; only 19% of cases initially received four-drug therapy. TB-related death occurred in 16%. CONCLUSIONS In this area, TB cases primarily involve traditional risk groups without HIV coinfection. Current infection control practices, diagnostic strategies, and initial treatment regimens are suboptimal. Education about local disease epidemiology is needed to prevent nosocomial TB transmission.


Transplantation direct | 2017

Risk for Clostridium difficile infection after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant remains elevated in the postengraftment period

Erik R. Dubberke; Kimberly A. Reske; Margaret A. Olsen; Kerry M. Bommarito; Sondra Seiler; Fernanda P. Silveira; Tom Chiller; John F. DiPersio; Victoria J. Fraser

Background Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is a frequent cause of diarrhea among allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) recipients. It is unknown whether risk factors for CDI vary by time posttransplant. Methods We performed a 3-year prospective cohort study of CDI in allogeneic HCT recipients. Participants were enrolled during their transplant hospitalizations. Clinical assessments were performed weekly during hospitalizations and for 12 weeks posttransplant, and monthly for 30 months thereafter. Data were collected through patient interviews and chart review, and included CDI diagnosis, demographics, transplant characteristics, medications, infections, and outcomes. CDI cases were included if they occurred within 1 year of HCT and were stratified by time from transplant. Multivariable logistic regression was used to determine risk factors for CDI. Results One hundred eighty-seven allogeneic HCT recipients were enrolled, including 63 (34%) patients who developed CDI. 38 (60%) CDI cases occurred during the preengraftment period (days 0-30 post-HCT) and 25 (40%) postengraftment (day >30). Lack of any preexisting comorbid disease was significantly associated with lower risk of CDI preengraftment (odds ratio [OR], 0.3; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.1-0.9). Relapsed underlying disease (OR, 6.7; 95% CI, 1.3-33.1), receipt of any high-risk antimicrobials (OR, 11.8; 95% CI, 2.9-47.8), and graft-versus-host disease (OR, 7.8; 95% CI, 2.0-30.2) were significant independent risk factors for CDI postengraftment. Conclusions A large portion of CDI cases occurred during the postengraftment period in allogeneic HCT recipients, suggesting that surveillance for CDI should continue beyond the transplant hospitalization and preengraftment period. Patients with continued high underlying severity of illness were at increased risk of CDI postengraftment.

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Erik R. Dubberke

Washington University in St. Louis

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Victoria J. Fraser

Washington University in St. Louis

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Carey-Ann D. Burnham

Washington University in St. Louis

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Kimberly A. Reske

Washington University in St. Louis

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Tiffany Hink

Washington University in St. Louis

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Jennie H. Kwon

Washington University in St. Louis

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Kerry M. Bommarito

Washington University in St. Louis

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Meghan Wallace

Washington University in St. Louis

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Angela Shupe

Washington University in St. Louis

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David K. Warren

Washington University in St. Louis

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