Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T17:03:53.483Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Oak in Hospitals, the Worst Enemy of Staphylococcus aureus?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 December 2016

Hélène Pailhoriès
Affiliation:
ATOMycA, Inserm Equipe Avenir, L’UBL Université Bretagne-Loire, Angers, France
Muhammad Tanveer Munir
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Innovation Matériau Bois Habitat Apprentissage (LIMBHA), Ecole Supérieure du Bois, Nantes, France
Florence Aviat
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Innovation Matériau Bois Habitat Apprentissage (LIMBHA), Ecole Supérieure du Bois, Nantes, France
Michel Federighi
Affiliation:
Hygiène et qualité des aliments, Oniris, Nantes, France.
Christophe Belloncle
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Innovation Matériau Bois Habitat Apprentissage (LIMBHA), Ecole Supérieure du Bois, Nantes, France
Matthieu Eveillard*
Affiliation:
ATOMycA, Inserm Equipe Avenir, L’UBL Université Bretagne-Loire, Angers, France
*
Address correspondence to Matthieu Eveillard, PharmD PhD, L’UBL Université Bretagne-Loire, ATOMycA, Inserm Equipe Avenir, CRCNA, Inserm U892, 6299 CNRS, IRIS, CHU, 4 rue Larrey, 49933 Angers cedex, France ([email protected]).
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Letters to the Editor
Copyright
© 2016 by The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America. All rights reserved 

To the Editor—Although the infection risk to patients from contaminated healthcare surfaces has long been controversial, it is now recognized that the environment may facilitate transmission of several important healthcare-associated bacteria, including vancomycin-resistant enterococci, Clostridium difficile, Acinetobacter spp., and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).Reference Dancer 1 In addition, the longer a nosocomial pathogen persists on a surface, the longer it may be a source for transmission to a susceptible patient or healthcare worker.Reference Schmidt, Attaway and Sharpe 2 Therefore, regular and conscientious cleaning is a necessary measure for keeping surfaces free from microbes. The nature of surfaces can also be considered.Reference Dancer 1 Although the use of wood is not banned in hospitals,Reference Sehulster and Chinn 3 this material still generates controversy in terms of infection control.Reference Schmidt, Attaway and Sharpe 2 , Reference Kacmaz and Gul 4 Concurrently, the benefits of a wood interior in a hospital room have been acknowledged by hospital staff,Reference Nyrud 5 and although it was demonstrated that the use of wooden wall panels in hospital rooms had no effect on the amount of volatile organic compounds.Reference Nyrud, Bringslimark and Englund 6 Considering those benefits, we aimed to test the potential antimicrobial activity of oak on a panel of S. aureus with different resistance patterns to antibiotics.

In total, 8 S. aureus clinical isolates (4 MRSA and 4 methicillin-susceptible S. aureus) were tested using disc diffusion according to the European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST) recommendations. 7 Of those bacteria, 2 had been isolated from sputum samples from cystic fibrosis patients, 2 from abscesses, 3 from blood cultures, and 1 from a urine sample. Samples of oak (Querceus spp.) used for the wood disks were derived from mature trees grown in France. Each oak sample was cut into a10-cm-thick board and was further cut by electric saw (Altendorf-F45, Minden, Germany) into thinner (2.5 mm) sheets with respect to the radial (R) or longitudinal (L) section. These oak sheets were used to prepare circular wood disks using a laser cutting machine (Trotec-SP500, C60, Wels, Austria). The diameter of 9 mm was selected because of the minimum accurate circle-making capacity of the machine. Disks of antibiotics currently used in our lab for clinical microbiology (ie, linezolid, trimethoprim + sulfamethoxazole, kanamycin, tobramycin, gentamicin, ofloxacin, fosfomycin, rifampicin, minocycline, all from Oxoid, Basingstoke, UK) were used for the study. Blank paper disks (ie, without an antimicrobial substance) were included as negative controls.

According to EUCAST break points, 3 isolates were resistant to kanamycin and tobramycin, 1 isolate was resistant to all aminoglycosides tested, 5 isolates were resistant to ofloxacin, and 2 isolates were resistant to rifampicin. All isolates were susceptible to trimethoprim + sulfamethoxazole, linezolid, and minocycline (Table 1). The major result of this report is that oak showed an antimicrobial activity on all the isolates tested. When considering both R and L disks, the inhibition diameters around the disks were ~20 mm and homogeneously distributed (standard deviation<3 mm). Notably, methicillin resistance did not really influence those diameters. The means of inhibition diameters around oak disks (19.4±2.7 mm) and around aminoglycoside disks (18.8±6.9 mm) were similar. Lastly, diameters around R disks were slightly greater than diameters around L disks.

TABLE 1 Inhibition Diameters Recorded Using the Disk Diffusion Method With 4 Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)and 4 Methicillin-Susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) IsolatesFootnote a

NOTE. NC, negative control; LNZ, linezolid; SXT, trimethoprim + sulfamethoxazole; K, kanamycin; TM, tobramycin; GM, gentamicin; OFX, ofloxacin; RIF, rifampicin; MN, minocycline; SD, standard deviation.

a All data are presented in millimeters.

b EUCAST 2016 break points (in mm) are indicated under the name of each antibiotic.

We demonstrated that wooden materials, and more particularly oak in this study, have an antimicrobial activity against a small but diverse panel of S. aureus. These results are somewhat discordant with those of some preceding reports. In a study comparing the recoverable proportion of MRSA from wood-free paper (containing <5% wood pulp and therefore essentially composed of cellulose pulp) and paper containing wood, Kacmaz et alReference Kacmaz and Gul 4 demonstrated that the counts of recoverable bacteria were significantly higher in paper containing wood at the different point measures (ie, 24 h, 48 h, 120 h, 144 h, and 168 h after the initial contamination). They proposed the use of paper containing wood to a lesser degree and for shorter periods in hospitals, especially when the compliance for hand hygiene is poor. By using a model of bacterial transmission from wood fomites artificially contaminated with MRSA USA300 to pigskin at different times after the initial contamination, Desai et alReference Desai, Pannaraj, Agopian, Sugar, Liu and Miller 8 demonstrated that USA300 was transmitted from wood to skin up to 3 days. Lastly, in a study conducted in 3 intensive care units (16 rooms in total) with weekly measures over a 43-month period, Schmidt et alReference Schmidt, Attaway and Sharpe 2 demonstrated that 61% of wooden chair arms were contaminated by high bacterial loads (microbial burden, >250 CFU/100 cm2). Our results are more consistent with those reported by Da Costa et al.Reference Da Costa, Kothari, Bannister and Blom 9 By observing the spontaneous contamination of tiles cut from oak, stainless steel, and high-density polyethylene, they demonstrated that wooden tiles were contaminated significantly less often than plastic tiles (10.3% vs 33.3%; P=.028) and were less often contaminated than metal tiles (10.3% vs 30.1%; P=0046). They concluded that oak is a more hostile environment for bacteria than the other surfaces tested.

The difference of the results between R and L could be explained by a difference in the diffusion of antimicrobial products in the agar medium depending upon the wood-cutting method. This finding is also consistent with the existence of antimicrobial products inside oak. Another interesting result is absence of impact of methicillin-resistance on the diameters around L and R. A hypothesis to explain this result could be the diversity of effective antimicrobial molecules that can be potentially present in vegetal resources like essential oils.Reference Montagu, Saulnier, Cassisa, Rossines, Eveillard and Joly-Guillou 10

These results should be completed by testing other bacteria potentially isolated from environmental surfaces to evaluate the microbial safety of using oak in the hospital setting.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT

This study was conducted with the collaboration of the MANIMAL Master program (IDEFI ANR 11-0003).

Financial support: No financial support was provided relevant to this article.

Potential conflicts of interest: All authors report no conflicts of interest relevant to this article.

References

REFERENCES

1. Dancer, SJ. Controlling hospital-acquired infections: focus on the role of the environment and new technologies for decontamination. Clin Microbiol Rev 2014;27:665690.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2. Schmidt, MG, Attaway, HH, Sharpe, PA, et al. Sustained reduction of microbial burden on common hospital surfaces through introduction of copper. J Clin Microbiol 2012;50:22172223.Google Scholar
3. Sehulster, L, Chinn, RYW. Guidelines for environmental infection control in healthcare facilities. Recommendations of CDC and the Healthcare Infection Control Practice Advisory Committee (HICPAC). MMWR 2003;52:142.Google Scholar
4. Kacmaz, B, Gul, S. A comparison of the recoverable proportion of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus from two different types of papers. GMS Hyg Infect Control 2016;11:14.Google Scholar
5. Nyrud, AQ. Benefits from wood interior in a hospital room: a preference study. Architect Sci Rev 2014;57:125131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6. Nyrud, AQ, Bringslimark, T, Englund, F. Wood use in a hospital environment: VOC emission and air quality. Eur J Wood Prod 2012;70:541543.Google Scholar
7. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing EUCAST disk diffusion method. European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing website. http://www.eucast.org/fileadmin/src/media/PDFs/EUCAST_files/Disk_test_documents/Manual_v_5.0_EUCAST_Disk_Test.pdf. Published 2015. Accessed November 25, 2016.Google Scholar
8. Desai, R, Pannaraj, PS, Agopian, J, Sugar, CA, Liu, GY, Miller, LG. Survival and transmission of community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus from fomites. Am J Infect Control 2011;39:219225.Google Scholar
9. Da Costa, AR, Kothari, A, Bannister, GC, Blom, AW. Investigating bacterial growth in surgical theatres: establishing the effect of laminar airflow on bacterial growth on plastic, metal and wood surfaces. Ann R Coll Surg Engl 2008;90:417419.Google Scholar
10. Montagu, A, Saulnier, P, Cassisa, V, Rossines, E, Eveillard, M, Joly-Guillou, ML. Aromatic and terpenic compounds loaded in lipidic nanocapsules: activity against multi-drug resistant Acinetobacter baumannii assessed in vitro and in a murine model of sepsis. J Nanomed Nanotechnol 2014;5:206.Google Scholar
Figure 0

TABLE 1 Inhibition Diameters Recorded Using the Disk Diffusion Method With 4 Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)and 4 Methicillin-Susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) Isolatesa