| Literature DB >> 31513652 |
Jun Zhang1, Bo Wang1, Jinxia Wang1, Qin Yang2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The widespread use of central venous catheters (CVCs) has exposed patients to a high risk of catheter-related infection (CRI), which is linked to substantial morbidity and mortality. Several strategies for preventing CRI, including ethanol lock prophylaxis, have been explored. This study aimed to provide a comprehensive summary of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) assessing the efficacy and safety of ethanol locks for preventing CRI in patients with CVC.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31513652 PMCID: PMC6742384 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0222408
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow diagram of included and excluded studies.
Characteristic of the included studies.
| First author, Year | Country | Disease | No. of patients (Exp/control) | No. of catheters (Exp/control) | Tunneled or nontunneled catheter | No. of catheters days (Exp/control) | Intervention | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exp | Control | |||||||
| Sanders 2008[ | New Zealand | hematology | 34/30 | 34/30 | tunneled | 5000/3537 | 70% ethanol | heparin |
| Slobbe 2010[ | Netherlands | hematology | 376 | 226/222 | tunneled | 14262/13483 | 70% ethanol | 0.9% NaCl |
| Broom 2012[ | Australia | hemodialysis | 25/24 | 25/24 | tunneled | 3614/1834 | 70% ethanol | heparin |
| Yang 2013[ | China | hemodialysis | 20/20 | 20/20 | not reported | not reported | 70% ethanol | heparin |
| Sun 2014[ | China | hemodialysis | 16/16 | 16/16 | tunneled | 4449/4363 | 70% ethanol | heparin |
| Worth 2014[ | Australia | hematology | 42/43 | 42/43 | tunneled | 2216/2657 | 70% ethanol | heparin |
| Schoot 2015[ | Netherlands | pediatric oncology | 153/154 | 153/154 | tunneled | 20916/19915 | 70% ethanol | heparin |
| Souweine 2015[ | France | renal-replacement therapy or plasma exchange | 730/730 | 1106/1066 | nontunneled | 6541/6496 | 60% wt/wt ethanol | 0.9% NaCl |
| Salonen 2017[ | USA | parenteral nutrition | 18/20 | 18/20 | not reported | 2597/ 3125 | 70% ethanol | heparin |
Exp, experimental group; Control, control group
Intervention protocols of the included studies.
| First Author, Year | Ethanol lock procedure |
|---|---|
| Sanders 2008[ | Three milliliters of 70% ethanol was injected into each lumen of the catheter daily and left for 2 hours before being entirely removed and replaced with heparinized saline. |
| Slobbe 2010[ | During hospitalization, every lumen of the CVC was locked with 3 ml 70% ethanol for 15 minutes per day, following which the solution was flushed through with 10 ml 0.9% NaCl. During outpatient settings, ethanol locks were administered once weekly before the replacement of the regular heparin solution. |
| Broom 2012[ | Participants received weekly catheter instillation of 3 ml 70% ethanol for 48 hours together with standard heparin locks following the remaining 2 hemodialysis sessions each week. |
| Yang 2013[ | Seventy percent ethanol was instilled into each lumen of the CVC weekly. |
| Sun 2014[ | After flushing CVC lumens with 20 ml 0.9% NaCl at the end of a hemodialysis session, 3.3 ml 70% ethanol was instilled into each catheter lumen and left in situ until the next dialysis session, when it was aspirated. |
| Worth 2014[ | After flushing CVC lumens with 10 ml 0.9% NaCl, 2 ml 70% ethanol was instilled into each CVC lumen daily for inpatients and left in situ for 2 hours. A 5- to 10-ml aliquot was then aspirated from each lumen before locking under positive pressure with 10 mL 0.9% NaCl. Self-caring outpatients were instructed to administer the ethanol lock three times weekly, with 2 hours dwell time. |
| Schoot 2015[ | Based on the size of the CVC, 1.5 or 3.0 ml of 70% ethanol was injected into each lumen of the catheter. After two hours, the ethanol lock solution was flushed with 0.9% NaCl, and the CVC was closed with heparin. Locks were administered at least once every six weeks, but with a maximum lock frequency of once weekly. |
| Souweine 2015[ | Two milliliters of ethanol was injected into each catheter lumen and left for 2 minutes before being entirely removed. Each lumen was then flushed with 20 ml of 0.9% NaCl and locked during the interrenal-replacement/plasma exchange periods with 0.9% NaCl containing 100 U/ml of unfractionated heparin. |
| Salonen 2017[ | Patients flushed their catheters with 10 ml 0.9% NaCl after completion of their parenteral nutrition and then locked the catheter with 3 ml 70% ethanol. Prior to administration of the next bag of parenteral nutrition, they again flushed their catheters with 10 mL 0.9% NaCl. |
Methodological quality of the included studies.
| First Author, Year | Random sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Blinding of participants and personnel | Blinding of outcome assessment | Incomplete outcome data | Selective reporting | Other source of bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sanders 2008[ | Computer-generated | Pharmacy | Low risk | High risk | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear |
| Slobbe 2010[ | Computer-generated | Pharmacy | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear |
| Broom 2012[ | Computer-generated | Central distribution | High risk | High risk | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear |
| Yang 2013[ | Unclear | Unclear | High risk | High risk | Low risk | Unclear | Unclear |
| Sun 2014[ | Computer-generated | Unclear | High risk | High risk | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear |
| Worth 2014[ | Unclear | Unclear | High risk | High risk | Low risk | Unclear | Unclear |
| Schoot 2015[ | Computer-generated | Central distribution | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear |
| Souweine 2015[ | Unclear | Unclear | Low risk | High risk | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear |
| Salonen 2017[ | Computer-generated | Unclear | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear |
Fig 2CRBSI per 1000 catheter days for trials that compared ethanol locks with heparin.
Fig 3CRBSI per patient for trials that compared ethanol locks with heparin.
Adverse events reported in the included trials.
| First Author, Year | Adverse events | |
|---|---|---|
| Exp | Control | |
| Sanders 2008[ | Dyspnea immediately after the first treatment (n = 1) | Unusual taste sensation and anxiety (n = 1) |
| Slobbe 2010[ | Facial flushing (n = 39); nausea/vomiting (n = 20); altered taste (n = 31); dizziness/drowsiness (n = 41); syncope shortly after the first treatment (n = 1) | Facial flushing (n = 17); nausea/vomiting (n = 17); altered taste (n = 19); dizziness/drowsiness (n = 10) |
| Broom 2012[ | Stinging at the catheter exit site (n = 1); dry lips and thirst (n = 1) | Bleeding (n = 1) |
| Yang 2013[ | Dizziness/drowsiness (n = 1) | No adverse events |
| Sun 2014[ | Facial flushing (n = 1); bleeding after insertion (n = 1); bad smell (n = 1) | Bleeding (n = 4) |
| Worth 2014[ | Chest discomfort (3); nausea (n = 1) | No adverse events |
| Schoot 2015[ | Nausea (n = 28); vomiting (n = 12); altered taste (n = 89); dizziness (n = 19); flushing (n = 31); drowsiness (n = 8); pain with injection (n = 8) | Nausea (n = 14); vomiting (n = 9); altered taste (n = 26); dizziness (n = 4); flushing (n = 4); drowsiness (n = 3); pain with injection (n = 4) |
| Souweine 2015[ | No adverse events | No adverse events |
| Salonen 2017[ | No adverse events | No adverse events |
Exp, experimental group; Control, control group