Effect of Antimicrobial Locks for Tunneled Hemodialysis Catheters on Bloodstream Infection and Bacterial Resistance: A Quality Improvement Report

被引:29
作者
Abbas, Saib A. [1 ]
Haloob, Imad A. [2 ]
Taylor, Susan L. [3 ]
Curry, Elizabeth M. [1 ]
King, Bruce B. [4 ]
van der Merwe, Walter M. [5 ]
Marshall, Mark R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Middlemore Hosp, Dept Renal Med, Cty Manukau Dist Hlth Board, Manukau, New Zealand
[2] Tauranga Hosp, Dept Renal Med, Bay Plenty Dist Hlth Board, Tauranga, New Zealand
[3] Middlemore Hosp, Dept Clin Microbiol, Cty Manukau Dist Hlth Board, Manukau, New Zealand
[4] Nelson Hosp, Dept Renal Med, Nelson Marlborough Dist Hlth Board, Nelson, New Zealand
[5] Whangarei Hosp, Dept Renal Med, Northland Dist Hlth Board, Whangarei, New Zealand
关键词
Hemodialysis; dialysis catheters; bacterial resistance; bloodstream infection; antimicrobial locks; ANTIBIOTIC-LOCK; VASCULAR ACCESS; PREVENTION; GENTAMICIN; BACTEREMIA; DIALYSIS; HEPARIN; DISEASE; MANAGEMENT; CITRATE;
D O I
10.1053/j.ajkd.2008.09.019
中图分类号
R5 [内科学]; R69 [泌尿科学(泌尿生殖系疾病)];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background: Catheter-restricted antimicrobial lock (AML) use reduces catheter-associated bloodstream infection (CA-BSI) in clinical trial settings, but may not be as effective in clinical settings and may increase bacterial resistance. Design: Quality improvement report analyzed using a cross-sectional time series (unbalanced panel) design. Setting & Participants: The study cohort comprised all prevalent adults treated with hemodialysis through a tunneled catheter for any, but not necessarily all, of the time from January 1, 2003, to June 30, 2006, in Manukau City, New Zealand (135,346 catheter-days, 404 tunneled catheters, 320 patients). Quality Improvement Plan: Catheter-restricted AMLs (heparin plus gentamicin) for all tunneled catheters from July 1, 2004. Measures: Repeated observations of CA-BSI, hospitalization, tunneled catheter removal, and death from CA-BSI analyzed by using generalized estimating equations with a single level of clustering for each tunneled catheter and patterns of bacterial resistance analyzed by using simple descriptive statistics. Results: AML use was associated with reductions in rates of CA-BSI and hospitalization for CA-BSI by 52% and 69% for patients with tunneled catheters locked continuously with AMLs since their insertion compared with those with tunneled catheters that were not, respectively. AML exposure also was associated with a trend to increased gentamicin resistance amongst coagulase-negative staphylococci isolates, a pattern similar to that observed for BSIs in our general hemodialysis population in which tunneled catheters were not the source of BSI, but different from that in the general non-end-stage renal disease population in the region. Limitations: This is an uncontrolled observational study and cannot prove causality. The follow-up period of 18 months is longer than for other studies, but still too short to definitely answer whether AML use drives bacterial resistance. Conclusions: A change to use of AMLs may improve clinical outcomes; however, additional study of associated bacterial resistance is needed before AML use becomes standard care.
引用
收藏
页码:492 / 502
页数:11
相关论文
共 72 条