Infection Clinical Trial
— CHG-Lock™Official title:
CHG-Lock™ Device for Bacteremia Prevention in Cardiac Surgical Intensive Care Unit Patients: An Open Label Randomized Feasibility Pilot Study
Verified date | May 2022 |
Source | Hamilton Health Sciences Corporation |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Intravenous catheters are often placed in large (central) veins in critically ill patients to provide special medications or frequent blood sampling. The body reacts to the presence of foreign material by forming a biofilm on the surface within the catheter. Either due to the patients condition or to emergency access to these intravenous lines can become infected with bacteria and reside within the biofilm. When bacteria is grown from these lines it is referred to as: a central line infection. A medical device company (ICU Medical) has obtained the rights to a device that delivers a controlled amount of a cleaning material called chlorhexidine into the catheter to prevent bacterial growth when not in use. Chlorhexidine is the standard cleaning material used on patients when cleaning the skin for surgical procedures or central intravenous catheter insertion. In laboratory tests and animal studies that chlorhexidine inhibits the growth of bacteria and fungi that often cause central line infections. This study will the first assessment in patients with central lines.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 100 |
Est. completion date | November 30, 2020 |
Est. primary completion date | November 30, 2020 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 100 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: 1. 18-100 year old adult patients admitted to the ICU; 2. Same-day admit to ICU; 3. Post-op patient with central lines in situ (PICC, multi-lumen, side arm of introducer catheters or temporary dialysis lines), AND; 4. Expected to have at least 1 central line in situ for more than 72 hrs. Exclusion Criteria: 1. >24hrs post-admittance to ICU 2. Hopeless prognosis 3. Currently admitted with known infection or suspicion of infection (i.e. known endocarditis or other infections). 4. Chronic indwelling central venous catheters present 5. Patients with known allergies to chlorhexidine |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Hamilton Health Sciences | Hamilton | Ontario |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Alison Fox-Robichaud | Dr. Julian Owen, Dr. Richard Whitlock, Pamela Benoit, RN |
Canada,
Holton D, Paton S, Conly J, Embree J, Taylor G, Thompson W. Central venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections occurring in Canadian intensive care units: A six-month cohort study. Can J Infect Dis Med Microbiol. 2006 May;17(3):169-76. — View Citation
Singer M, Deutschman CS, Seymour CW, Shankar-Hari M, Annane D, Bauer M, Bellomo R, Bernard GR, Chiche JD, Coopersmith CM, Hotchkiss RS, Levy MM, Marshall JC, Martin GS, Opal SM, Rubenfeld GD, van der Poll T, Vincent JL, Angus DC. The Third International C — View Citation
Ziegler MJ, Pellegrini DC, Safdar N. Attributable mortality of central line associated bloodstream infection: systematic review and meta-analysis. Infection. 2015 Feb;43(1):29-36. doi: 10.1007/s15010-014-0689-y. Epub 2014 Oct 21. Review. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Compliance with the protocol | The investigators will consider our study successful if we achieve compliance of than 90% use of device for locking. | Through study completion, an average of 14 days | |
Secondary | Bacteremia | Rates of bacteremia determined by blood cultures obtained through a central line | Through study completion, an average of 14 days | |
Secondary | Bacteria colonization of central line | Central Line Colonization Testing will be completed when the investigators are able to obtain the discontinued central line catheters for Electron Microscopy examination | Through study completion, an average of 14 days |
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