by Takashima,
Mari; Schults, Jessica; Mihala, Gabor; Corley, Amanda; Ullman, Amanda
Objectives: To
examine the proportion and rate of central venous access device failure and
complications across central venous access device types in adult intensive
care.
Data Sources: A
systematic search was undertaken in the electronic databases Cochrane Central
Register of Controlled Trials, Embase, U.S. National Library of Medicine
National Institutes of Health, and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied
Health in September 2017.
Study Selection:
Included studies were of observational (prospective and retrospective) or
interventional design and reported central venous access device failure and
complications in adult ICU settings. Studies were excluded if they were
published prior to November 2006 or not reported in English. Two reviewers
independently screened articles, assessed eligibility, extracted data, and
assessed risk of bias.
Data Extraction: Data
were extracted on the primary outcome, central venous access device failure,
and secondary outcomes: central venous access device complications (central
line-associated bloodstream infection, catheter-related bloodstream infection,
catheter-related thrombosis, occlusion, catheter removal due to suspected
infection, dislodgement, breakage, and local infection). Patient and device
data and study details to assess the study quality were also extracted.
Data Synthesis: A total of 63 studies
involving 50,000 central venous access devices (396,951 catheter days) were
included. Central venous access device failure was 5% (95% CI, 3–6%), with the
highest rates and proportion of failure in hemodialysis catheters. Overall
central line-associated bloodstream infection rate was 4.59 per 1,000 catheter
days (95% CI, 2.31–6.86), with the highest rate in nontunneled central venous
access devices. Removal of central venous access device due to suspected
infection was high (17%; 20.4 per 1,000 catheter days; 95% CI, 15.7–25.2).
Conclusions:
Central venous access device complications and device failure is a prevalent
and significant problem in the adult ICU, leading to substantial patient harm
and increased healthcare costs. The high proportion of central venous access
devices removed due to suspicion of infection, despite low overall central
line-associated bloodstream infection and catheter-related bloodstream
infection rates, indicates a need for robust practice guidelines to inform
decision-making surrounding removal of central venous access devices suspected
of infection.
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