Central Venous Catheter Clinical Trial
Official title:
Skin Decolonization of Children Hospitalized in Intensive Care Unit by Daily Toilet : Mild Soap Versus Chlorhexidine Gluconate 2% Pad
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and duration of the skin decolonization brought by a daily wash using Chlorhexidine Gluconate 2% pad compared to a standard wash with mild soap in children hospitalized in intensive care unit.
Skin is a major reservoir of pathogenic bacteria and intensive care unit patients are
particularly vulnerable to variations in skin colonization and so to infections. These
bacterial skin colonizations can contaminate other patients, nursing staff or even samples,
but above all they are an endogenous source of infection of material. These bacterial skin
colonizations hold therefore a major place in the responsibility of infections associated
with care and can potentially affect the length of patient hospitalization. 2% Chlorhexidine
Gluconate pads have already demonstrated a real efficacy in the sustainable reduction of
central venous catheter-related bacteremias in adults and in children, probably through a
reduction of cutaneous microbial colonization. However, this hypothesis remains to be
confirmed.
Patients in the pediatric surgical intensive care unit of Necker-Enfants Malades hospital are
minors, hospitalized in critical and continuous surgical surveillance unit, for all surgical
specialties excluding cardiac surgery. The use of central venous catheters concerns
approximately 60% of the hospitalization days identified each year. To control
catheter-related bacteremias, all intensive care unit patients are subjected to a service
protocol since 2015, which defines a mild soap daily wash in patients without central venous
catheter and a wash with Chlorhexidine in patients with central venous catheter. Successive
standardized samples will be carried out on the skin of the children submissive to both types
of washes during their hospitalization in intensive care unit.
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