| Literature DB >> 30245876 |
Stephen Albano1, Blake Berman1, Glenn Fischberg1, Javed Siddiqi1, Bolin Liu1, Yasir Khan1, Atif Zafar2, Syed A Quadri1, Mudassir Farooqui2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nosocomial EVD-related ventriculitis is a major complication and a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in critically ill neurological patients. Questions remain about best management of EVDs. The purpose of this study is to compare our incidence of ventriculitis to studies using different catheters and/or antibiotic coverage schemes and determine whether c-EVD with prolonged antibiotics given for the duration of drain placement is inferior to ac-EVD with pp-abx or ac-EVD with prolonged antibiotics for prevention of ventriculitis.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30245876 PMCID: PMC6139185 DOI: 10.1155/2018/5179356
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Res Int ISSN: 2090-1860
Demographics and indications for EVD placement n=107 (percentages may not total 100% due to rounding errors).
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| Average (years) | 56 |
| Range | 18-95 |
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| Male | 66 (61.7%) |
| Female | 41 (38.3%) |
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| White | 52 (48.6%) |
| Black | 3 (2.8%) |
| Other | 52 (48.6%) |
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| ICH | 35 (32.7%) |
| Trauma | 28 (26.2%) |
| Aneurysmal rupture | 27 (25.2%) |
| Edema | 10 (9.3%) |
| SAH | 7 (6.5%) |
Incidence of ventriculitis in various studies compared incidence of ventriculitis in current study.
| Author | c-EVD | p-value (vs Albano SD et al | c-EVD with pp- Abx | p-value (vs Albano SD et al) | c-EVD prolonged ABx | p-value (vs Albano SD et al) | ac-EVD with pp-ABx | p-value (vs Albano SD et al) | ac-EVD prolonged ABx | p-value (vs Albano SD et al) |
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| Albano SD (current study) | 3/107 (3%) | |||||||||
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| Wong GK [ | 3/94 (3%) | 0.31 | 1/90 (1%) | 0.29 | ||||||
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| Abla AA [ | 0/64 vs 0/65 (0%) | <0.0001 | ||||||||
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| Poon WS [ | 12/113 (11%) | 0.015 | 3/115 (3%) | 0.32 | ||||||
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| Wyler AR [ | 7/26 (27%) | 0.004 | 4/44 (9%) | 0.087 | ||||||
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| Blomstedt GC [ | 1/27 (4%) | 0.42 | 1/25 (4%) | 0.41 | ||||||
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| Wright K [ | 12/51 (24%) | <0.0001 | 2/47 (4%) | 0.32 | ||||||
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| Zabramski JM [ | 13/139 (9%) | 0.025 | 2/149 (1%) | 0.25 | ||||||
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| Pople I [ | 5/181 (3%) | 0.29 | 4/176 (2%) | 0.29 | ||||||
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| Alleyne Jr CH [ | 4/99 (4%) | 0.27 | 8/209 (4%) | 0.24 | ||||||
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| Aggregate | 8/56 (14%) | 0.007 | 16/212 (8%) | 0.050 | 49/858 (6%) | 0.092 | 1/219 (<1%) | 0.094 | 8/372 (2%) | 0.25 |
Profile of ventriculitis cases identified.
| CSF culture | Resistance Profile | Initial Antibiotic | Antibiotic change to | Duration of drain | Indication | IVH | IT tPA | |
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| Case 1 | Staphylococcus epidermidis | Oxacillin, Penicillin G | Cefazolin | Ceftazidime, Vancomycin, | 14 days | ICH | Yes | Yes |
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| Case 2 | Staphylococcus epidermidis | Erythromycin, Oxacillin, Penicillin G, Clindamycin | Cefazolin, Amoxicillin/ clavulanate | Ceftazidime, Vancomycin, Levaquin (pneumonia) | 15 days | Cerebral edema | No | No |
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| Case 3 | Staphylococcus haemolyticus | Erythromycin, Oxacillin, Penicillin G, TMP-SMZ | Cefazolin | Vancomycin, Meropenem, Ceftriaxone (concurrent UTI) | 11 days | Aneurysm rupture | No | No |
Sputum cultures for nosocomial pneumonia.
| Negative Sputum Culture | 70 (65.4%) |
| Klebsiella pneumonia | 6 (5.6%) |
| Klebsiella oxytoca | 1 (0.9%) |
| Klebsiella planticola | 1 (0.9%) |
| Escherichia coli | 1 (0.9%) |
| Staphylococcus aureus | 10 (9.3%) |
| Pseudomonas aeuroginosa | 2 (1.9%) |
| Pseudomonas putida | 2 (1.9%) |
| Streptococcus pneumonia | 3 (2.8%) |
| Streptococcus mitis | 1 (0.9%) |
| Streptococcus oralis | 1 (0.9%) |
| Enterobacter aerogenes | 2 (1.9%) |
| Enterobacter cloacae | 3 (2.8%) |
| Enterobacter faecalis | 2 (1.9%) |
| Serratia marcesens | 3 (2.8%) |
| Citrobacter koseri | 2 (1.9%) |
Outline of trial data, definition for infection, and sampling schedule.
| Author | c-EVD | c-EVD with pp- Abx | c-EVD prolonged ABx | ac-EVD with pp-ABx | ac-EVD prolonged ABx | p-value between groups in each respective study | Conclusion | Definition of infection | Sampling rate | Type of study | Time Frame |
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| Albano SD et al | 3/107 (3%) | Infection – positive CSF culture with sensitivity | Clinical suspicion | Retrospective review | Jan 2010 - Dec 2015 | ||||||
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| Wong GK et al [ | 3/94 (3%) | 1/90 (1%) | 0.282 | “Antibiotic impregnated catheters are as effective as systemic antibiotics in the prevention of CSF infection and their corresponding nosocomial infection rates are not statistically different” | Infection – positive CSF bacterial culture with CSF white cell count > 10/mm3, CSF protein level > 0.8g/L and CSF to serum glucose ratio <0.4 | CSF collected every 5 days on evidence of clinical sepsis | Randomized trial | Apr 2004 - Dec 2008 | |||
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| Abla AA et al [ | 0/64 vs 0/65 (0%) | “These results support the use of antibiotic impregnated EVD catheters in routine clinical practice” due to “comparison with reported mean of nearly 9% for standard EVD catheters” | Infection – positive CSF cultures (same organism grown on two different media or on same medium twice) | CSF collected twice weekly Mondays and Thursdays | Prospective sequential series trial | Jan 2007 – June 2008 | |||||
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| Poon WS et al [ | 12/113 (11%) | 3/115 (3%) | 0.01 | “antibiotic regimen against both Gram positive and Gram-negative bacteria was effective in preventing ventriculostomy related sepsis caused by common pathogens” | Infection – CSF culture and/or CSF white cell count >50/mm3 | Unknown sampling frequency. Catheter changed every 5 days | Randomized trial | Oct 1993 – Sep 195 | |||
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| Wyler AR et al [ | 7/26 (27%) | 4/44 (9%) | “chi square and t-tests of significance (with alpha level at 0.05) show statistically different infection rates between the two groups” | “If on the other hand, the anticipated duration of ventriculostomy is more than 3 days or CSF viscosity is usually high, prophylactic antibiotics should be used” | Infection – not defined however organism identified by culture | CSF collected upon insertion and removal | Retrospective review | Jan-1963 – Jan 1969 | |||
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| Blomstedt GC et al [ | 1/27 (4%) | 1/25 (4%) | 0.51 (p calculated from data reported) | No conclusion specific to antibiotic with EVD as data to the left was part of a secondary outcome measure | Infection – not defined however organism identified by culture | Timing and frequency of CSF sample not described | Double blind randomized trial | Apr 1980 – Jun 1983 | |||
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| Wright K et al [ | 12/51 (24%) | 2/47 (4%) | 0.0265 | “Rates of VRIs (ventriculostomy related infections) have decreased with the addition of ac-EVDs to the routine use of prolonged systemic antibiotics at the author's institution | Infection – clinical signs and symptoms of infection, abnormal CSF parameters and a positive CSF culture | CSF sample when clinically indicated | Retrospective review | Feb 2007 – Nov 2009 | |||
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| Zabramski JM et al [ | 13/139 (9%) | 2/149 (1%) | 0.002 (chi-square test) | “The use of EVD catheters impregnated with minocycline and rifampin can significantly reduce the risk of catheter related infections” | Infection – positive CSF cultures (same organism on two different media or same medium twice) | CSF collected at time of insertion, every 72 hours and on removal | Multicenter prospective, randomized controlled trial | Dec 1998 – Mar 2001 | |||
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| Pople I et al [ | 5/181 (3%) | 4/176 (2%) | 1.0 | “AI-EVD (antibiotic impregnated) catheters were not associated with risk reduction in EVD infection compared to standard catheters” | Infection – CSF sample demonstrate positive gram stain that was culture positive in agar growth | CSF sample at time of insertion, day 3 post implant, catheter removal, time of suspected infection | Multicenter, international, prospective, randomized open label trial | Nov 2004 – Sep 2010 | |||
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| Alleyne Jr CH et al [ | 4/99 (4%) | 8/209 (4%) | 0.242 (Fisher exact test calculated using data reported) | “use of continuous prophylactic antibiotics offers no benefit over periprocedural dosing alone” | Infection – positive CSF cultures | CSF sampled at time of insertion and twice weekly | Retrospective review | Jan 1996 – Jun 1997 | |||