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Management of Intravascular Catheter related infection

Management of Intravascular Catheter related infection. Intern 陳易宏 Supervisor: VS 趙安怡 Ref: Clinical Infectious Diseases 2001;32:1249-72. Types of intravascular devices. Epidemiology and pathogens. 200000 nosocominal bloodstream infection /5million CVC placement annually in U.S. (4%)

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Management of Intravascular Catheter related infection

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  1. Management of Intravascular Catheter related infection Intern 陳易宏 Supervisor: VS 趙安怡Ref: Clinical Infectious Diseases 2001;32:1249-72

  2. Types of intravascular devices

  3. Epidemiology and pathogens • 200000 nosocominal bloodstream infection /5million CVC placement annually in U.S. (4%) • Case-fatality rate: 14%, 19% of these death can be attribute to catheter related infection. • Coagulase negative staphylococci, S. aureus, aerobic gram negative bacilli, C. albicans. • Mortality rate of catheter related bacteremia varies from species to species • Eg: S. aureus (8.2%) v. CNS (0.7%)

  4. Specific culture methodology • Roll plate (Semi-quantitave) • Vortex or Sonication (Quantitative) • Sensitivity: 80% v. 60% (roll plate) v. 40-50% (flush culture). • Quantitative culture of CVC blood sample. • Useful in diagnose the tunneled catheter related blood stream infection. • Differential time to positivity for CVC versus peripheral blood culture • Useful in hospital which do not have quantitative culture methods.

  5. Diagnosis • One positive result of culture of blood samples obtained from the peripheral vein • Clinical manifestations of infection. • No apparent source for bloodstream infection • One of the following should be present • a positive result of semiquantitative (15 cfu per catheter segment) or quantitative (102 cfu per catheter segment) catheter culture • same organism (species and antibiogram) • simultaneous quantitative cultures of blood samples with a ratio of 5:1 (CVC vs. peripheral); • CVC sample differential time to positivity 2 h earlier than peripheral blood)

  6. Diagnosis of non tunneled CVC infection

  7. Diagnosis of tunneled CVC infection

  8. Complication: Septic Thrombosis • Continued positive blood culture results after catheter withdrawal. • S. aureus is the most common pathogen. • Use of thrombolytic agents in addition to antimicrobial agents is not recommended. • Heparin should be used in the treatment of septic thrombosis of the great central veins and arteries. • Surgical exploration is needed when infection extends beyond the vein into surrounding tissue.

  9. Complication: Persistent bloodstream infection and IE • Empirical therapy in this situation must include coverage for staphylococci. • Remove the CVC • 4 weeks of antimicrobial therapy in most cases and with surgical intervention when indicated. • Exception: Uncomplicated tricuspid valve endocarditis due to staphylococci in injection drug users, a 2-week duration of antimicrobial therapy appears to be effective.

  10. Management • Remove the central venous catheter / implantable device or not? • Depending on the complications and specific microorgainsm. • What antibiotics and the duration of treatment? • Depending on whether the device is salvaged, the complications and specific microorgainsm. From no antibiotics usage to 8 weeks. • Is antibiotics lock therapy useful? • In most GPC intraluminal infection, YES.

  11. Antibiotics lock therapy • Antibiotic in a concentration of 1–5 mg/mL are usually mixed with 50–100 U heparin to fill the catheter lumen and are installed or “locked” into the catheter lumen during periods when the catheter is not being used (e.g., for a 12-h period each night). • Several open trials of antibiotic lock therapy of tunneled catheter related bacteremia, have reported catheter salvage without relapse in 138 (82.6%) of 167 episodes, compared to 342 (66.5%) of 514 episodes which use standard parenteral therapy.

  12. Specific pathogen: CNS • Coagulase-negative staphylococci, such as S. epidermidis, are the most common cause of catheter-related infections. • Catheter-related infections due to CNS staphylococci predominantly manifest with fever alone or fever with inflammation at the catheter exit site. • Vancomycin empirical therapy is appropriate before culture data to be obtained.

  13. Specific pathogen: S. aureus • TEE should be done to r/o endocarditis. • Vancomycin should not be used when there’s infection with b-lactam susceptible S. aureus. • excessive vancomycin use selects vancomycin-resistant organisms • vancomycin has higher failure rates than do either oxacillin or nafcillin • slower clearance of bacteremia among patients with S.aureus endocarditis

  14. Specific pathogen: C. albicans • All patients with candidemia should be treated • Amphotericin B is recommended for hemodynamically unstable patients or who have received prolonged fluconazole therapy • Salvage therapy for infected tunneled CVCs or IDs is not recommended for routine use • Salvage rates with systemic fungal therapy and antibiotic lock therapy for Candida species have been about 30%.

  15. Management of removable CVC infection

  16. Management of tunneled CVC infection

  17. Summery • Paired quantitative blood culture is recommended especially in tunneled CVD/ID to confirm diagnosis. • TEE should be done to rule out vegetations in S. aureus bloodstream infection. • For complicated infections, the CVC/ID should be removed. • For uncomplicated intraluminal bacterial infection in the absence of tunnel or pocket infection, 2 weeks systemic therapy with antibiotic lock therapy add chance to salvage the CVC/ ID.

  18. Areas of further research. • Do patients with positive results of catheter cultures but with negative blood culture results and no other obvious site of infection need to be treated with antibiotics? • Prospective, randomized studies for the optimum duration of treatment when the catheters are left in place. • Prospective, randomized studies to determine the efficacy of combined systemic and antibiotics lock therapy in specific pathogen.

  19. Thanks for your attention

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