| Literature DB >> 30997542 |
Philippe Eggimann1,2, Jean-Luc Pagani3, Elise Dupuis-Lozeron4, Bruce Ekholm Ms5, Marie-Josèphe Thévenin6, Christine Joseph3, Jean-Pierre Revelly3, Yok-Ai Que7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prospective randomized controlled studies have demonstrated that addition of chlorhexidine (CHG) dressings reduces the rate of catheter (central venous and arterial)-associated bloodstream infections (CABSIs). However, studies confirming their impact in a real-world setting are lacking.Entities:
Keywords: Bacteremia; Catheter bundle; Catheter-related infections; Central line-associated bloodstream infections; Chlorhexidine gel; Chlorhexidine sponge; Chlorhexidine-dressing; Nosocomial infection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30997542 PMCID: PMC6534662 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-019-05617-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Fig. 1Definitions of infections. There are two different scenarios. Scenario 1: patient is admitted directly from outside of the hospital. In these cases, any episode of bloodstream infection was attributed to the ICU. Scenario 2: Patient is admitted from within the hospital. In this case, the episode of infection is attributed to the ICU only when it occurs ≥ 48 h from admission
Characteristics of ICU activities and patients by study period
| Period | A | B | C | D | E | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All | January 2006 to October 2007 | November 2007 to November 2009 | December 2009 to May 2011 | June 2011 to May 2013 | June 2013 to December 2014 | |
| Type of disinfectant dressing added to the ongoing catheter bundle* | None | CHG sponge on CVC only | CHG sponge on all catheters | Replacement of CHG sponge by CHG gel in 2 out of 5 ICUs | CHG gel on all catheters (five of five ICUs) | |
| ICU activity | ||||||
| ICU treatment days | 91,292 | 17,185 | 20,429 | 15,476 | 20,726 | 17,476 |
| Mean ICU LOS, days (SD) | 5.0 (15.6) | 4.3 (7.5) | 4.4 (7.9) | 5.1 (9.2) | 5.3 (11.6) | 6.3 (17.3) |
| Admissions (all ICU stays), | 19,423 | 4213 | 4931 | 3213 | 4133 | 2933 |
| Emergency (%) | 13,651 (70.3) | 3037 (72.1) | 3484 (71.5) | 2183 (70.1) | 2872 (71.3) | 2075 (70.7) |
| Surgical admissions, | 13,018 (67.0) | 2779 (66.0) | 3258 (66.1) | 2265 (70.5) | 2749 (66.5) | 1967 (67.1) |
| Scheduled surgery, | 5722 (29.5) | 1222 (29.0) | 1409 (28.6) | 963 (30.0) | 1211 (29.3) | 917 (31.3) |
| Emergency surgery, | 7296 (37.5) | 1557 (37.0) | 1849 (37.5) | 1302 (40.5) | 1538 (37.2) | 1050 (35.8) |
| Site of surgery | ||||||
| Cardiovascular, | 2131 (16.4) | 436 (15.7) | 536 (16.5) | 343 (15.1) | 452 (16.4) | 364 (18.5) |
| Digestive, | 1621 (12.5) | 296 (10.7) | 432 (13.3) | 268 (11.8) | 356 (13.0) | 269 (13.7) |
| Neurosurgery, | 1173 (9.0) | 300 (10.8) | 313 (9.6) | 203 (9.0) | 204 (7.4) | 153 (7.8) |
| Thoracic, | 663 (5.1) | 138 (5.0) | 163 (5.0) | 106 (4.7) | 132 (4.8) | 124 (6.3) |
| Trauma, | 795 (5.9) | 174 (6.3) | 194 (6.0) | 137 (6.1) | 145 (5.3) | 145 (7.4) |
| Workload: NEMS mean (SD) per 12 h shift | 30 (25–37) | 28 (27–32) | 31 (27–37) | 31 (27–37) | 30 (25–37) | 29 (22–36) |
| ICU treatments | ||||||
| Patients with ventilation, admissions (%) | 7146 (36.8) | 1306 (30.1) | 1533 (31.1) | 1216 (37.9) | 1492 (36.1) | 1599 (54.5) |
| Ventilation-days | 50,852 | 8008 | 10,901 | 9445 | 12,574 | 9924 |
| Mechanical ventilation, mean days/months (SD) | 471 (108) | 364 (76) | 436 (80) | 525 (77) | 524 (116) | 522 (79) |
| Catheter-days | 155,242 | 27,713 | 34,363 | 26,128 | 36,689 | 30,349 |
| CVC (%) | 89,489 (57.6) | 15,547 (56.1) | 19,553 (56.9) | 15,024 (57.5) | 21,641 (59.0) | 17,724 (58.4) |
| CVC-jugular (%) | 41,684 (46.6) | 6618 (42.6) | 8365 (42.8) | 7128 (47.4) | 10,642 (49.2) | 8931 (50.4) |
| CVC-sub-clavian (%) | 16,747 (18.7) | 3549 (22.8) | 3740 (19.1) | 3070 (20.4) | 3866 (17.9) | 2521 (14.2) |
| CVC-femoral (%) | 31,058 (34.7) | 5380 (34.6) | 7448 (38.1) | 4826 (32.1) | 7132 (33.0) | 6272 (35.4) |
| Arterial (%) | 65,753 (42.3) | 12,166 (43.9) | 14,810 (43.1) | 11,104 (42.5) | 15,048 (41.0) | 12,625 (41.6) |
| Catheter-days per month, mean (SD) | 1419 (275) | 1161 (189) | 1322 (191) | 1471 (169) | 1545 (295) | 1636 (232) |
| Patient with extra-renal replacement therapy, admissions, (%) | 1621 (8.4) | 204 (4.8) | 352 (7.1) | 250 (7.8) | 424 (10.3) | 391 (13.3) |
| Mean extra-renal replacement therapy, mean hours/month (SD) | 1370 (847) | 763 (460) | 1162 (717) | 1037 (437) | 1824 (883) | 2091 (843) |
| Patients | ||||||
| Number | 18,286 | 3981 | 4607 | 3022 | 3901 | 2775 |
| Age, year (median, IQR) | 63.7 (51.4–73.9) | 62.6 (50.3–73.2) | 63.6 (50.8–74.4) | 65.0 (54.3–74.5) | 64.3 (52.3–74.6) | 65.2 (52.6–74.5) |
| Males, | 12,025 (65.8) | 2632 (66.1) | 3040 (66.0) | 1995 (66.0) | 2536 (65.0) | 1822 (65.7) |
| Patient comorbidities | ||||||
| NYHA IV (%) | 1864 (10.2) | 396 (9.9) | 554 (12.0) | 348 (11.5) | 335 (8.6) | 231 (8.3) |
| Chronic dialysis, | 396 (2.2) | 80 (2.0) | 114 (2.5) | 49 (1.6) | 67 (1.7) | 86 (3.1) |
| Severe COPD, | 1383 (7.6) | 309 (7.8) | 312 (6.8) | 215 (7.1) | 288 (7.4) | 259 (9.3) |
| Liver cirrhosis, | 739 (4.0) | 128 (3.2) | 171 (3.7) | 121 (4.0) | 182 (4.7) | 137 (4.9) |
| Metastatic cancer, | 2356 (12.9) | 461 (11.6) | 581 (12.6) | 375 (12.4) | 541 (13.9) | 398 (14.3) |
| Mc Cabe—within 5 years, | 5088 (27.8) | 1078 (27.1) | 1342 (29.1) | 824 (27.3) | 1021 (26.2) | 823 (29.7) |
| Mc Cabe—within 1 year, | 1741 (9.5) | 290 (7.3) | 415 (9.0) | 265 (8.8) | 458 (11.7) | 313 (11.3) |
| Major critical illness | ||||||
| Hemorrhagic shock, | 657 (3.6) | 130 (3.3) | 100 (2.2) | 112 (3.7) | 166 (4.3) | 149 (5.4) |
| Cardiogenic shock, | 726 (4.0) | 166 (4.2) | 157 (3.4) | 126 (4.2) | 136 (3.5) | 141 (5.1) |
| Septic shock, | 1299 (7.1) | 207 (5.2) | 326 (7.1) | 180 (6.0) | 331 (8.5) | 255 (9.2) |
| Pneumonia, | 2511 (13.7) | 544 (13.7) | 587 (12.7) | 382 (12.6) | 544 (13.9) | 454 (16.4) |
| Peritonitis, | 408 (2.2) | 87 (2.2) | 114 (2.5) | 58 (1.9) | 81 (2.1) | 68 (2.5) |
| Severity | ||||||
| SAPS II median (IQR) | 38 (27–49) | 35 (25–45) | 36 (26–47) | 38 (29–49) | 41 (30–53) | 40 (28–51) |
| ICU mortality, | 1974 (10.8) | 386 (9.7) | 441 (9.6) | 305 (10.1) | 474 (12.2) | 368 (13.3) |
| Hospital post-ICU mortality, | 539 (2.9) | 115 (2.9) | 157 (3.4) | 100 (3.3) | 99 (2.5) | 68 (2.5) |
CRBSI catheter-related bloodstream infection, CABSI catheter-associated bloodstream infection, i.e., CRBSI + primary bacteremia
*See supplemental Table 2
Comparison of two types of CHG dressings
| (a) Period C (sponge only) versus period E (gel only) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All | Period C sponge only | Period E gel only | Period E vs. period C | |
| Catheter-day | 56,477 | 26,128 | 30,349 | |
| CABSI | 25 | 18 | 7 | |
| Incidence density rate of infection (95% CI) | 0.44 (0.28–0.66) | 0.69 (0.43–1.09) | 0.23 (0.11–0.48) | 0.019 |
| CRBSI | 14 | 11 | 3 | |
| Incidence density rate of infection (95% CI) | 0.25 (0.14–0.42) | 0.42 (0.23–0.76) | 0.10 (0.03–0.31) | 0.018 |
| Primary bacteremia | 11 | 7 | 4 | |
| Incidence density rate of infection (95% CI) | 0.19 (0.10–0.35) | 0.27 (0.13–0.56) | 0.13 (0.05–0.35) | 0.99 |
Infections (n) and incidence density rates of infections (episodes per 1000 catheter-days; 95% CI) by type of dressing
Fig. 2Post-study surveillance data (2015-2018) of catheter-associated bloodstream infections (CABSI). CABSI expressed as rate of infection by central venous catheter-days. Period A: 2.31 (95% CI 1.61–3.0) CABSIs per 1000 central venous catheter-days; period B: 1.15 (0.77–1.54); period C: 0.69 (0.37–1.01); period D: 0.47 (0.19–0.75); period E: 0.38 (0.10–0.67); post-study period: 0.34 (0.18–0.49)
| The addition of chlorhexidine dressings to all CVC and arterial lines to an ongoing catheter bundle to all patients consecutively admitted to a large mixed ICU resulted in a significantly sustained 11-year reduction of all catheter-associated bloodstream infections |
| This large real-world data study further supports the current recommendations for the systematic use of CHG dressings on all catheters of ICU patients |