Abstract
Abstract
Background
In the critically ill, catheter-related bloodstream infection can result from bacterial contamination of infusion hubs of intravascular catheters. Needle-free connectors (NFC) have been suggested to reduce the rate of bacterial contamination and subsequent catheter-related bloodstream infection (CRBSI), but data remains ambiguous. Thus, we tested if a novel NFC would reduce bacterial contamination and subsequent CRBSI.
Results
In a prospective, randomized controlled trial, surgical ICU patients were randomized to three-way hubs closed by caps or Bionecteur® (Vygon, Inc.) of central venous catheters. Every 72 h, infusion lines were renewed and microbiological samples were taken. Bacterial growth was analyzed by blinded microbiologists. Incidence of bacterial contamination and CRSBI were assessed. Outcome parameters like length of stay on ICU and outcome were retrospectively assessed. Two thousand seven hundred patients were screened, 111 were randomized to the NFC, and 109 into the control group. Finally, 24 patients in the NFC and 23 control patients were analyzed. The majority of samples (NFC 77%; control 70%) found no bacterial growth. Coagulase-negative staphylococci were most commonly detected on CVC samples (NFC 17%; control 21%). We found CRBSI (defined as identical pathogens in blood culture and catheter line tip culture, and clinical manifestations of infection) in two control patients and one patient of the NFC group. Their length of ICU stay did not differ between groups (NFC 19 days; control 23 days).
Conclusion
The use of NFC does not influence the rate of bacterial contamination of infusion hubs of central venous catheters.
Trial registration
Clinicaltrials.gov, NCT02134769. Registered 09 May 2014.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Reference21 articles.
1. Lutz P, Strassburg CP (2018) Infektionen unter medikamentöser Immunsuppression bei transplantierten Intensivpatienten. Intensivmedup2date 14(02):167–182
2. Templeton A, Schlegel M, Fleisch F, Rettenmund G, Schobi B, Henz S, Eich G (2008) Multilumen central venous catheters increase risk for catheter-related bloodstream infection: prospective surveillance study. Infect 36(4):322–327
3. Prävention von Infektionen, die von Gefäßkathetern ausgehen. Bundesgesundheitsblatt - Gesundheitsforschung - Gesundheitsschutz 2017, 60(2):216-230.
4. Trautmann Matthias KM, Radmilla B (2012) Disinfection of a needleless connector with alcohol-based disinfectant wipes – an experimental study. Hyg Med 37(9):5
5. Slater K, Fullerton F, Cooke M, Snell S, Rickard CM (2018) Needleless connector drying time-how long does it take? Am J Infect Control 46(9):1080–1081
Cited by
8 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献