Catheter-related Bloodstream Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of Three Strategies for Changing of Central Venous Catheters in Patients With Serious Burns for the Prevention of Catheter-associated Bacteremia: Randomized Clinical Trial
The aim of this project is to answer the following questions:
To determine the incidence of catheter related bacteremia (CRB) with three strategies of
central venous catheter exchange in critically ill adult patients with major burn and to
determine the regimen that will minimize the risk of bacteremia.
To determine the incidence rate of catheter colonization in adult patients with major burns.
The scientific knowledge to be acquired through this project is of likely benefit to the
care of critically ill patients with burns injury as follows:
The intention is to improve the outcomes in critically ill patients by minimizing one of the
most frequent causes of infection in the Burn Intensive Care Unit, those from central venous
catheters. Decreasing infections will decrease morbidity, decrease length of stay, decrease
costs, and decrease mortality.
Aim: To determine the incidence of catheter-related bacteremia (CRB) with three primary
schedules of central venous catheter exchange in adult critically ill patients with major
burn injury.
Hypothesis: A strategy of catheter exchange according with clinical criteria will result in
no more CRB compared with a routine catheter changes without guidewire exchange strategy or
frequent guidewire exchange or frequent new-site replacement.
Background: The intravenous catheter-related bacteremia (ICRB) is a nosocomial infection
affecting patients admitted to intensive care and that leads to increased morbidity.
Accumulative incidence rates of ICRB are 5.5 infections per 1000 catheters-day. Several
strategies have been proposed to decrease of the rate of ICRB in critically ill patients.
However, there is not agreement to recommend a replacement pattern of central venous
catheters in adult critically ill patients with major burns as a strategy for the reduction
in intravenous catheter-associated bacteremia.
Objectives. To compare three strategies of replacement from central venous catheters for the
prevention of ICRB. Find out the risk of mechanical complications associated with each
strategy of central venous catheter replacement.
Method. Randomized, multicenter clinical trial, single blind to compare three strategies for
intravenous catheter replacement in patients with major burns: a scheduled wire-guided
strategy every six days: second, a scheduled strategy of replacement every six days in a
different punction and third, a re-change strategy guided by clinical criteria for suspicion
of catheter-associated infection. Primary outcome: catheter colonization rate and rate of
intravenous catheter-associated bacteremia. Secondarily, we calculate the incidence rate of
colonization of central venous catheter and finally we will analyze the associated
complications.
This project requires enough patients to show a difference between three intervention
groups. A significant decrease in infection rate would be from the current 20 infections per
1000 catheter days to approximately 15 per 1000 catheter days. This would require a minimum
of 1000 catheter days per group.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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