Prolonged Catheter Use and Infection in Regional Anesthesia

Author:

Bomberg Hagen1,Bayer Ina1,Wagenpfeil Stefan1,Kessler Paul1,Wulf Hinnerk1,Standl Thomas1,Gottschalk André1,Döffert Jens1,Hering Werner1,Birnbaum Jürgen1,Spies Claudia1,Kutter Bernd1,Winckelmann Jörg1,Liebl-Biereige Simone1,Meissner Winfried1,Vicent Oliver1,Koch Thea1,Sessler Daniel I.1,Volk Thomas1,Raddatz Alexander1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care Medicine and Pain Medicine (H.B., I.B., T.V., A.R.), and the Institute for Medical Biometry, Epidemiology and Medical Informatics (S.W.), Saarland University, University Medical Center, Homburg/Saar, Germany; the Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care and Pain Medicine, Orthopedic University Hospital, Frankfurt, Germany (P.K.); the Depar

Abstract

Abstract Background Prolonged catheter use is controversial because of the risk of catheter-related infection, but the extent to which the risk increases over time remains unknown. We thus assessed the time-dependence of catheter-related infection risk up to 15 days. Methods Our analysis was based on the German Network for Regional Anesthesia, which includes 25 centers. We considered 44,555 patients who had surgery between 2007 and 2014 and had continuous regional anesthesia as well as complete covariable details. Cox regression analysis was performed and adjusted for confounding covariables to examine the relationship between catheter duration and probability of infection-free catheter use. Results After adjustment for confounding factors, the probability of infection-free catheter use decreases with each day of peripheral and epidural catheter use. In peripheral catheters, it was 99% at day 4 of catheter duration, 96% at day 7, and 73% at day 15. In epidural catheters, it was 99% at day 4 of catheter duration, 95% at day 7, and 73% at day 15. Only 31 patients (0.07%) had severe infections that prompted surgical intervention. Among these were five catheters that initially had only mild or moderate signs of infection and were left in situ; all progressed to severe infections. Conclusions Infection risk in catheter use increases over time, especially after four days. Infected catheters should be removed as soon as practical.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

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