| Literature DB >> 34517829 |
Sonja van Roeden1, Mathijs van Oevelen2, Alferso C Abrahams3, Friedo W Dekker4, Joris I Rotmans2, Sabine C A Meijvis3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: To prevent infection and thrombosis of central venous catheters (CVCs) in hemodialysis patients, different CVC lock solutions are available. Taurolidine-based solutions and citrate in different concentrations are frequently used, but no definite conclusions with regard to superiority have been drawn.Entities:
Keywords: Central venous catheter; Hemodialysis; Lock; Lock solution
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34517829 PMCID: PMC8439004 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-021-02519-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Baseline characteristics of patients and CVC characteristics of first line
| All | Taurolidinea | High- concentrated citrate | Low-concentrated citrate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1514 | 96 (6) | 1110 (73) | 308 (20) | |
| 65 (53–74) | 58 (42–69) | 66 (54–75) | 63 (53–73) | |
| 893 (59) | 59 (61) | 649 (58) | 185 (60) | |
| 37 (11–120) | 102 (27–210) | 35 (9–112) | 35 (13–118) | |
| 605 (40) | 30 (31) | 421 (38) | 154 (50) | |
| 555 (37) | 34 (35) | 421 (38) | 100 (32) | |
| 411 (27) | 21 (22) | 296 (27) | 94 (31) | |
| Tunneled | 404 (27) | 39 (41) | 301 (27) | 64 (21) |
| Non-tunneled, precurved | 624 (41) | 51 (53) | 459 (41) | 114 (37) |
| Non-tunneled, straight | 461 (30) | 6 (6) | 330 (30) | 125 (41) |
| 4% | 55 (4) | – | – | 55 (18) |
| 30% | 253 (17) | – | – | 253 (82) |
| 46.7% | 1110 (73) | – | 1110 (100) | – |
| Jugular | 1182 (78) | 89 (93) | 862 (78) | 231 (75) |
| Subclavian | 37 (2) | 4 (4) | 27 (2) | 6 (2) |
| Femoral | 276 (18) | 3 (3) | 205 (18) | 68 (22) |
| | 675 (45) | 36 (38) | 484 (44) | 155 (50) |
| | 156 (10) | 6 (6) | 120 (11) | 30 (10) |
| | 163 (11) | 6 (6) | 119 (11) | 38 (12) |
| | 407 (27) | 24 (25) | 329 (30) | 54 (18) |
| due to (any) infection | 83 (5) | 4 (4) | 62 (6) | 17 (6) |
| cessation of dialysis | 108 (7) | 1 (1) | 93 (8) | 14 (5) |
a92 consisted of taurolidine and heparine500, 4 consisted of taurolidine only
Hazard ratio’s for primary and secondary outcomes
| Endpoint / Lock type | Events | Patients | HR | 95%CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Citrate 4% or 30% | 68 | 308 | Ref. | ||
| Citrate 46.7% | 239 | 1110 | 0.96 | 0.73–1.26 | 0.76 |
| Taurolidine | 12 | 96 | 0.34 | 0.19–0.64 | < 0.001 |
| Citrate 4% or 30% | 30 | 308 | Ref. | ||
| Citrate 46.7% | 120 | 1110 | 1.10 | 0.74–1.64 | 0.64 |
| Taurolidine | 6 | 96 | 0.36 | 0.15–0.88 | 0.02 |
| Citrate 4% or 30% | 38 | 308 | Ref. | ||
| Citrate 46.7% | 119 | 1110 | 0.85 | 0.59–1.23 | 0.39 |
| Taurolidine | 6 | 96 | 0.33 | 0.14–0.79 | 0.01 |
Ref. indicates reference catgory
Fig. 1Kaplan-Meier survival curves for the primary and secondary endpoint per lock solution category
Incidence of infections and corresponding pathogens
| All | Taurolidine | High- concentrated citrate | Low-concentrated citrate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1603 | 129 (8) | 1132 (71) | 317 (20) | |
| 2749 | 211 (8) | 1840 (67) | 490 (18) | |
| 271,295 | 40,671 | 166,819 | 43,533 | |
| 225 | 15 (12) | 149 (13) | 36 (11) | |
| 0.83 | 0.37 | 0.89 | 0.83 | |
| 16 | 2 (10) | 9 (3) | 5 (5) | |
| 1.77 | 0.80 | 1.70 | 4.03 | |
| Coagulase negative staphylococci (%) | 72 (32) | 5 (33) | 46 (31) | 11 (31) |
| | 61 (27) | 2 (13) | 45 (30) | 9 (25) |
| Gram-negative (%) | 43 (19) | 4 (27) | 30 (20) | 6 (17) |
| Gram-positive (%) | 40 (18) | 3 (20) | 24 (16) | 9 (25) |
| Yeast (%) | 2 (< 1) | – | – | 1 (3) |
adifferent lock solutions within patients during different CVC possible. In this table, all consecutive CVC are taken in to account and patients who used citrate or taurolidine locks later on (not only first) lines were also included)
b14 CVC with > 1 episode of BSI: 9 with citrate lock and 1 with taurolidine lock
cfor all lines
dmultiple pathogens per episode possible. Unknown pathogen in 14 positive cultures