| Literature DB >> 35250284 |
Marios Karvouniaris1, Alexandros Brotis2, Konstantinos Tsiakos3, Eleni Palli4, Despoina Koulenti5,6.
Abstract
Ventriculitis or post-neurosurgical meningitis or healthcare-associated ventriculitis and meningitis (VM) is a severe infection that complicates central nervous system operations or is related to the use of neurosurgical devices or drainage catheters. It can further deteriorate patients who have already presented significant neurologic injury and is associated with high morbidity, mortality, and poor functional outcome. VM can be difficult to distinguish from aseptic meningitis, inflammation that follows hemorrhagic strokes and neurosurgical operations. The associated microorganisms can be either skin flora or nosocomial pathogens, most commonly, Gram-negative bacteria. Classical microbiology can fail to isolate the culprit pathogen. Novel cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers and molecular microbiology can fill the diagnostic gap and expedite pathogen identification and treatment. The pathogens may demonstrate significant resistant patterns and their antibiotic treatment can be difficult, as many important drug classes, including the beta-lactams and the glycopeptides, hardly penetrate to the CSF, and do not achieve therapeutic levels at the site of the infection. Treatment modifications, such as higher daily dose and prolonged or continuous administration, might increase antibiotic levels in the site of infection and facilitate pathogens clearance. However, in the case of therapeutic failure or infection due to difficult-to-treat bacteria, the direct antibiotic instillation into the CSF, in addition to the intravenous antibiotic delivery, may help in the resolution of infection. However, intraventricular antibiotic therapy may result in aseptic meningitis and seizures, concerning the administration of aminoglycosides, polymyxins, and vancomycin. Meanwhile, bacteria form biofilms on the catheter or the device that should routinely be removed. Novel neurosurgical treatment modalities comprise endoscopic evacuation of debris and irrigation of the ventricles. VM prevention includes perioperative antibiotics, antimicrobial impregnated catheters, and the implementation of standardized protocols, regarding catheter insertion and manipulation.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotic penetration; cerebrospinal fluid; external ventricular drain; intraventricular treatment; molecular diagnostics; ventriculitis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35250284 PMCID: PMC8896765 DOI: 10.2147/IDR.S326456
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Drug Resist ISSN: 1178-6973 Impact factor: 4.003
Diagnostic Criteria for External Ventricular Drain-Associated Ventriculomeningitis
| Considerations | IDSA | CDC | Lozier§ | Mounier | Gozal§ | Honda |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fever* | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No |
| Clinical meningitis symptoms and signs # | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
| Suggestive CSF profile | Yes | No/yes¶ | Yes | No | Yes## | Yes¶¶ |
| CSF culture required for diagnosis | Yes | Yes/no¶ | Yes (or Gram stain) | Yes** | Yes | Yes |
| Quantity of microorganism growth required | Any | Any | Any | Any | Any | Any |
| Aseptic meningitis excluded | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Antibiotic pretreatment considered | No | Yes | No | No | No | No |
| Antimicrobials targeting CNS | No | No | No | Yes | No | No |
| Time required after EVD insertion | No | No | No | No | No | >48-hours |
| Interval from catheter removal for a valid diagnosis | No | No | No | No | Up to 72 hours | Up to 5 days |
Note: *May represent other focus of infection. #Can be absent due to severity of the primary disease. ¶By the criterion 1 of the definition/by the criterion 2. §Definitions of ventriculitis. **Two CSF samples necessary for skin flora microorganisms. ##CSF glucose <50mg/dL or CSF glucose to same-day serum glucose ratio < 50%. ¶¶Required only to consider skin flora.
Abbreviations: CDC, Center for Disease Control and Prevention; CNS, central nervous system; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; EVD, external ventricular drain; IDSA, Infectious Diseases Society of America.
Prevention Studies Reporting Incidence
| First Author, Year; Study; Period; Country; Reference | Device | Catheter Type | Hand Hygiene Enhanced; Hand Hygiene Compliance Monitoring; Educational Program and/or Checklist | Item(s) Related to Insertion | Items Related to Manipulation | Routine Catheter Exchange; Catheter Removal | VM Rate Before/CG | VM Rate After/IG | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antibiotic Prophylaxis; Patient Skin Antisepsis | Head Hair Management | SC Tunneling; Length | Other | Aseptic Management | Dressing Change; Type | CSF Sampling Frequency | Other | |||||||
| Walek; 2021; Retrospective; 2007-2019; USA; | EVD | Plain; AIC only after suspected or proven VM | Yes; yes; yes | No; yes | Clipping | Yes; NA | Sterile implantation; all OR doors closed strategy | Yes | No dressing, unless oozing from site | Only if suspected VM | Aseptic management of unintended disconnection; aseptic change of full collection reservoir | No; as soon as possible | 6.7 /1000 EVD days | 2/1000 EVD days* |
| Thien; 2019; Prospective, following retrospective audit; 2014-16; USA; | EVD | Plain, SIC, and AIC | NS; no; no | Single dose before; scrub with Hexodane followed by Cetrimide 1% and povidone iodine | At least ¼ head shave | Yes; ≥5cm | Double gloves and change outer glove before handling EVD | Yes | Elective change at 4 days; plain | According to the level of suspicion | EVD clamped when handled or patient is mobilized; drainage bag changed when ¾ full | Optional if colonized or after 21 days; within 10 days if feasible | 4.8% | 2% |
| Yang Li; 2019; prospective; 2016-18 China; | EVD | NS | Yes; no; yes | Single dose before; CHX antisepsis | NS | NS | – | Yes | Changed every 2 days; NA | Every 2 days for culturing | Daily drainage bag emptying | NS | 5.48% | 2.62%* |
| Ates; 2020; before-after; 2011-13; Turkey; | VPS | AIC | Yes; yes; yes | Yes; CHX antisepsis | Shave | By definition; NA | OR doors closed | Yes | Changed 48 hours later; NS | NA | NA | NA | 6.8% | 2,6%* |
| Whyte; 2020; before-after; 2014-15 and 2017; USA; | EVD, SGD, SDD | NA | NS; NS; yes | Started before, <48-hour prophylaxis; | Clipping | NS | – | Yes | When loose or soiled; CHX- eluting | NS | – | NS | 5.5% | 5.6% |
| Hussein; 2019; before-after; 2014-17; Israel; | EVD, LD, ICP | NA | Yes; yes; yes | Yes, unspecified timing; NS | NS | NS | OR insertion for EVD, ICP | Yes | NS | Only if VM suspected | MDR-carriers’ cohorting; Daily catheter assessment | No; as soon as possible | 17.3/1000 catheter days | 9.2/1000 |
| Sweeny; 2019; Retrospective cohort; 2012-18; USA; | VPS | Plain | NS; NS; yes | Before and up to 24 hours; CHX antisepsis | NS | By definition; NA | CHX antisepsis 12h before operation; Limited traffic in OR | NS | NS | NA | NA | NA | 8.8% | 5.6% |
| Katzir; 2019; retrospective cohort; 2010-15; Israel; | EVD | AIC | NS; NS; NS | Single dose before; NS | NS | Yes; ≥5cm | OR insertion | Yes | Every 2 days; semi-occlusive adhesive | NA | NA | Every 5 days vs clinically indicated; NS | 32% | 8% |
| Mallucci; 2019; Single blinded RCT; 2013-17; UK/Ireland; | VP shunt | Plain vs AIC vs SIC | NS; NS; NS | Before was standard, further NS; NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NA | NA | NA | 6% | 2%* AIC/IG vs 6% SIC/IG |
| Roethlisberger; 2018; Single-blinded RCT Trial; 2013-16; Switzerland; | EVD | SIC | NS; NS; NS | Single-dose, before skin incision; yes | Hemicranial clipping | 5cm | OR indertion | NS | If bleeding 12hs post-operation or every 5 days; non-CHX-adhesive (CG) vs CHX-containing (IG) | NS | Dressing edges secured by surgical stapler | NS | 26% | 14%# |
| Omrani; 2018; Retrospective cohort; 2009-15; UK; | VPS, VAS, VpS | AIC | NS; NS; Yes | Yes; Povidone iodine scrub | Clipping | By definition; NA | OR insertion; Restricted access; Double glove changed before assembling shunt and inserting ventricular catheter | NS | NS | NA | NS | NA | 5.43% | 3.27% |
| Ershova;, 2018; Prospective; 2011-16; Russia; | EVD | NS | Yes; yes; yes | Single anesthesia induction dose; CHX antisepsis | NS | NS | Sterile implantation, only by clear indications | Yes | NS | NS | Minimization of disconnections | No; as soon as possible | 22.2 cases per 1000 EVD days | 13.5 cases per 1000 EVD days |
| Bashir; 2016; Retrospective; 2003-9; Denmark; | VPS | Plain | NS; NS; NS | Vancomycin, 980mg IV and 20mg IVT before; CHX antisepsis | Shaving | By definition; NA | Limited traffic in the OR; Glove change before shunt handling | NS | NS | NA | NA | NA | 11.8% | 9.8% |
| Chatzi; 2014; before-after; Greece; | EVD | Plain | Yes; yes; yes | 30 minutes prior to and 6–8 hr after insertion | Shaving | Yes; ≥5cm | OR insertion | Yes | Daily; plain | If clinically indicated | EVD unblocking was avoided or, otherwise, performed distally | Aiming at 7th drainage day; as soon as possible | 28% | 10.5%* |
| Camacho; 2013; before-after; 2007-10; Brasil; | EVD | NA | Yes; yes; yes | Before and up to 24 hours post-insertion; CHX antisepsis | Whole scalp clipping | 5cm | OR insertion; semirecumbent position; | Yes | Daily dressing changes and head wrapping by neurosurgery residents | Only when infection is suspected | Avoidance of catheter unblocking | No; If the system integrity is violated or as soon as possible | 9.5% | 4.8% |
| Flint; 2013; retrospective before-after; 2005-7 and 2009-11; USA; | EVD | Plain (before), AIC (after) | Yes;NS; yes | Single dose before; CHX antisepsis | Broad clipping | 3–5cm | ICU insertion; all staff in room wore mask and cap; full draping of patient’s head and body; | Yes, strict technique | No routine change; adherent transparent dressing | On clinical indication | Manipulation steps: a) all staff in room wore mask and cap; b) 3-way stopcock positioned at 45°, b) stopcock and adjacent tubing submerged into isopropyl alcohol, c) the physician wears sterile gloves and gown, d) rubbed with CHX, e) port opened and cap discarded, f) inner port repeatedly rubbed with CHX, g) saline rinsing, h) CSF sampling or flush, i) new, sterile cap placed | No; NS | 6.3% | 0.8%* |
| Kubilay; 2013; prospective; 2006-12; USA; | EVD | AIC | Yes; no; yes (nurse monitoring at bedside) | Before and up to 24 hours; iodine povacrylex and isopropyl alcohol antisepsis | Clipping | NS | Compliance monitoring by the patient’s bedside nurse | Yes | NS | N | NA | NS | 9.2% | 0% |
| Lwin; 2012; Prospective, 3-phased audit; 2007-8; Singapore; | EVD | Plain initially and SIC during the last phase | Yes; yes; yes | NS; NS | NS | NS | Limiting the number of personnel in the OR and minimising the duration of the operation | Yes | NS | When VM was suspected | – | Within 10 days; as soon as possible | 6.1% | 0% |
| Kestle; 2011; Prospective; 2007-9; USA; | VPS, VAS, VpS | Non-AIC | Yes; yes; yes | A dose before and a second dose following operation; CHX antisepsis | Clipping | By definition; NA | Limited traffic in the OR; Patient position of the OR site away from door | NS | NS | NA | – | NA | 8.8% | 5.7%* |
| Williams; 2011; before-after; 2005-7; Australia; | EVD | NS | NS; NS; NS | NS; CHX antisepsis | Clipped or shaved only around bur hole | No | – | Yes | Every 3 days; plain transparent | Daily vs every 3 days | Unblocking by saline with sterile gloves and aseptic technique | NS | 17% | 10.8%* |
Notes: *denotes significant reduction; #denotes nonsignificant VM reduction ; however, the bacterialregrowth at the catheter exit site was significantly decreased.
Abbreviations: AIC, antibiotic-impregnated catheter; CG, control group; CHX, chlorhexidine; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; EVD, external ventricular drain; ICP, intracranial pressure; ICU, intensive care unit; IG, intervention group; IV, intravenous; IVT, intraventricular; NA, not applicable; NS, not specified; OR, operating room; SIC, silver-impregnated catheter; UK, United Kingdom; USA, United States of America; VAS, ventriculoatrial shunt; VP, ventriculoperitoneal shunt; VpS, ventriculopleural shunt; VM, ventriculitis or postoperative meningitis or healthcare-associated ventriculitis and meningitis.
Common Intraventricular/Intrathecal Treatment Options
| Drug | Recommended Adult Daily Dose# | Loading Dose Suggested | Adverse Events Reported | Targeted Pathogens |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amikacin | 5–50mg | – | Transient hearing loss, seizures, chemical meningitis, radiculopathy (IT) | DTR Gram-negatives |
| Colistin | 10mg | 40mg | Chemical meningitis, seizures | DTR Gram-negatives |
| Daptomycin | 5mg | – | Limited data available | Gram-positives non-responding to systemic treatment |
| Gentamycin | 4–8mg | – | Equivalent to amikacin | DTR Gram-negatives |
| Polymyxin B | 5mg | – | Equivalent to colistin | DTR Gram-negatives |
| Tigecycline* | 4–8mg | – | None attributed to the drug | DTR Gram-negatives, especially if colistin-resistant as well; potentially VRE |
| Tobramycin | 5–20mg | – | Equivalent to amikacin | DTR Gram-negatives |
| Vancomycin | 5–20mg | – | CSF pleocytosis, headache | Gram-positives non-responding to systemic treatment |
Notes: *Limited data available. #Apart from tigecycline, according to Infectious Disease Society of America recommendations.2
Abbreviations: CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; DTR, difficult-to-treat resistant; IT, intrathecal; VRE, vancomycin-resistant enterococci.