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Comparative Efficacies of Antimicrobial Catheter Lock Solutions for Fungal Biofilm Eradication in an in Vitro Model of Catheter-Related Fungemia. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • * The study compared the effectiveness of two FDA-approved catheter lock solutions (heparin and saline) with three experimental solutions (30% citrate, TCH, and NiCE) in eradicating fungal biofilms from catheters.
  • * The nitroglycerin-citrate-ethanol (NiCE) solution was the only one to completely eliminate fungal biofilms within 60 minutes, proving significantly more effective than TCH (p = 0.002).

Article Abstract

Fungal catheter-related bloodstream infections (CRBSIs)-primarily due to species-account for over 12% of all CRBSIs, and have been progressively increasing in prevalence. They present significant health and economic burdens, and high mortality rates. Antimicrobial catheter lock solutions are an important prophylactic option for preventing fungal CRBSIs. In this study, we compared the effectiveness of two FDA-approved catheter lock solutions (heparin and saline) and three experimental antimicrobial catheter lock solutions-30% citrate, taurolidine-citrate-heparin (TCH), and nitroglycerin-citrate-ethanol (NiCE)-in an in vitro model of catheters colonized by fungi. The fungi tested were five different strains of clinical isolates from cancer patients who contracted CRBSIs. Time-to-biofilm-eradication was assessed in the model with 15, 30, and 60 min exposures to the lock solutions. Only the NiCE lock solution was able to fully eradicate all fungal biofilms within 60 min. Neither 30% citrate nor TCH was able to fully eradicate any of the biofilms in this time frame. The NiCE lock solution was significantly superior to TCH in eradicating biofilms of five different species ( = 0.002 for all).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5715961PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jof3010007DOI Listing

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