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Systematic culture of central catheters and infections related to catheters in a neonatal intensive care unit: an observational study. | LitMetric

Systematic culture of central catheters and infections related to catheters in a neonatal intensive care unit: an observational study.

Sci Rep

Department of Neonatal Paediatrics, APHP, Service de Néonatologie, Sorbonne Université, Hôpital Armand Trousseau, 26 Av. du Dr Arnold Netter, 75012, Paris, France.

Published: April 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Systematic cultures of central line tips in NICUs may not be as clinically useful due to high bacterial contamination rates during removal, leading to debate on their necessity.
  • A retrospective study analyzed infections and bacterial colonization in 375 newborns with central catheters, finding a 43% colonization rate and 31 confirmed catheter-related infections among suspected sepsis cases.
  • The study suggests that only culturing catheters when infections are suspected could be a more efficient approach than routine screening, as antibiotic effectiveness did not significantly differ between expert recommendations and actual prescriptions.

Article Abstract

Systematic culture of the tip of central lines is performed in many neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) to guide any subsequent antibiotic therapy. The clinical relevance of this procedure is debated, given the significant bacterial contamination during its removal. We aimed to describe infections related to catheters and assess the usefulness of central catheter systematic cultures for probabilistic antibiotic therapy in cases of suspicion of catheter-related infections in a NICU. A retrospective study in a NICU included all newborn patients hospitalized with a central catheter, between January 2018, and June 2019. The main outcome measures were bacterial catheter colonization, catheter-related infection rate, and simulation-based approach to antibiotic prescription. Three hundred and seventy-five newborns, with 634 central catheters were included. There were 273 (43%) catheters that were colonized by at least one microorganism. There were 183 cases of suspected sepsis, with 31 infections definitively related to the catheter. In our simulation antibiotic prescription approach, there was no significant difference in terms of the efficacy toward the microorganism(s) involved between the probabilistic antibiotic therapies proposed by the experts and those ultimately prescribed. Performing a catheter culture only if catheter-related infection is suspected could be an alternative to routine screening.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11018835PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-59371-2DOI Listing

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