| Literature DB >> 24570595 |
Cesar Bustos1, Aitziber Aguinaga1, Francisco Carmona-Torre2, Jose Luis Del Pozo3.
Abstract
Since the first description in 1982, totally implanted venous access ports have progressively improved patients' quality of life and medical assistance when a medical condition requires the use of long-term venous access. Currently, they are part of the standard medical care for oncohematologic patients. However, apart from mechanical and thrombotic complications, there are also complications associated with biofilm development inside the catheters. These biofilms increase the cost of medical assistance and extend hospitalization. The most frequently involved micro-organisms in these infections are gram-positive cocci. Many efforts have been made to understand biofilm formation within the lumen catheters, and to resolve catheter-related infection once it has been established. Apart from systemic antibiotic treatment, the use of local catheter treatment (ie, antibiotic lock technique) is widely employed. Many different antimicrobial options have been tested, with different outcomes, in clinical and in in vitro assays. The stability of antibiotic concentration in the lock solution once instilled inside the catheter lumen remains unresolved. To prevent infection, it is mandatory to perform hand hygiene before catheter insertion and manipulation, and to disinfect catheter hubs, connectors, and injection ports before accessing the catheter. At present, there are still unresolved questions regarding the best antimicrobial agent for catheter-related bloodstream infection treatment and the duration of concentration stability of the antibiotic solution within the lumen of the port.Entities:
Keywords: bacteremia; biofilm; catheter-related infection
Year: 2014 PMID: 24570595 PMCID: PMC3933716 DOI: 10.2147/IDR.S37773
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Drug Resist ISSN: 1178-6973 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Biofilm development.
Notes: I Planktonic bacteria; II Attachment of bacterial cells; III Bacterial cells form a biofilm using their pili and exopolysaccharide; IV Mature biofilm; V Release of micro-organisms to the bloodstream.
Summary of some RCT and controlled studies’ published articles on catheter infection and prevention of CRBSI
| Design | N | Intervention | Main conclusion | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Retrospective | 54 | Oral prophylaxis with doxycycline in HCT patients | No CVC infection in the doxycycline group | |
| Retrospective | 459 | Single dose of antibiotic during placement of TIVPAs | Decrease of CRI | |
| Observational | 179 | Perioperative prophylactic cefuroxime administration | No CRBSI reported | |
| Crossover, randomized | 26 | Oral prophylaxis with novobiocin and rifampin | Effectiveness of antibiotic prophylaxis | |
| Randomized | 40 | 3 days of vancomycin during insertion of CVC | Bacteremic episodes reduced in the vancomycin group | |
| Randomized, controlled | 148 | Amoxicillin prophylaxis to prevent CRI | Failure to demonstrate benefit of amoxicillin prophylaxis | |
| Randomized | 88 | Teicoplanin before insertion of Hickman catheter | Lower incidence of CRS in teicoplanin arm | |
| Randomized, controlled | 98 | Vancomycin during placement of long-term CVC | Failure to reduce CRS | |
| Randomized | 47 | Single dose of vancomycin at time of insertion of CVC | Failure to reduce CRS | |
| Retrospective | 31 | 70% ethanol lock solution followed by NaCl 0.9% flushing | Reduced CRBSI-related admissions | |
| Randomized, double-blind | 376 | 70% ethanol vs placebo for 15 minutes followed by NaCl 0.9% flushing | No significant difference between groups | |
| Prospective, open-label | 12 | Overnight 70% ethanol lock solution | No significant difference observed | |
| Randomized | 133 | Chlorhexidine and silver sulfadiazine catheters vs nonimpregnated | Failure to reduce incidence of colonization or CRBSI | |
| Randomized | 204 | Chlorhexidine and silver sulfadiazine catheter vs no antiseptic catheter | No significant difference between groups | |
| Randomized, double-blind | 370 | Minocycline and rifampin catheters vs no antimicrobial catheters | Antimicrobial catheters decreased CRI | |
| Randomized | 228 | Chlorhexidine and silver sulfadiazine catheters vs no antiseptic catheters | Antiseptic-bonded catheters have lower colonization rate | |
| Randomized | 817 | Chlorhexidine and sulfadiazine vs minocycline and rifampin catheters | Antibiotic catheters had lower colonization and CRBSI | |
| Randomized, controlled | 119 | Chlorhexidine and sulfadiazine catheters vs nonimpregnated | Reduction of colonization in the antibiotic arm | |
| Randomized, double-blind | 538 | Chlorhexidine and silver sulfadiazine catheters vs nonimpregnated | No significant difference between groups | |
| Randomized, controlled | 158 | Chlorhexidine and silver sulfadiazine catheters vs nonimpregnated | Reduced incidence of CRI | |
| Randomized, double-blind | 281 | Coated minocycline and rifampin CVC | Antibiotic-coated CVC reduced colonization and BSI | |
| Randomized | 233 | Chlorhexidine and sulfadiazine catheters vs nonimpregnated | Reduction of colonization in the antibiotic group | |
| Randomized | 20 | Teicoplanin-coated CVC vs noncoated antibiotic CVC | No significant difference between groups | |
Abbreviations: BSI, bloodstream infection; CRBSI, catheter-related bloodstream infection; CRI, catheter-related infection; CRS, catheter-related sepsis; CVC, central venous catheter; HCT, hematopoietic cell transplantation; RCT, randomized controlled trial; TIVPA, totally implanted venous port access; vs, versus.