4.6 Article

Effectiveness of Antimicrobial Lock Therapy for the Treatment of Catheter-Related and Central-Line-Associated Bloodstream Infections in Children: A Single Center Retrospective Study

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ANTIBIOTICS-BASEL
卷 12, 期 5, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics12050800

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antimicrobial lock therapy; central venous catheter; catheter-related bloodstream infections; catheter-associated bloodstream infections; children

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ALT combined with systemic antibiotics is an effective and safe strategy for treating children with CLABSI/CRBSI episodes, according to the study. The research aimed to investigate the causes of ALT failure in the pediatric population and found that 67.6% of children achieved clinical and microbiologic success with ALT. Factors such as dwell time and use of taurolidine and MDR bacteria infections were associated with the success rate.
Antimicrobial lock solutions (ALT) in combination with systemic antibiotics can represent a valid option to attempt central venous catheter (CVC) salvage in the case of catheter-related and central-line-associated bloodstream infections (CRBSI and CLABSI). However, data concerning the effectiveness and safety of ALT in children are limited. We aimed to share our center's experience in order to contribute to investigations into the causes of ALT failure in the pediatric population. All children consecutively admitted to Meyer Children's Hospital, University of Florence, Italy, from 1 April 2016 to 30 April 2022, who received salvage ALT to treat an episode of CRBSI/CLABSI, were reviewed. According to ALT failure or success, children were compared with the aim of identifying the risk factors for unsuccessful ALT outcome. Data from 28 children, 37 CLABSI/CRBSI episodes, were included. ALT was associated with clinical and microbiologic success in 67.6% (25/37) of children. No statistically significant differences were observed between the two groups, successes and failures, considering age, gender, reason for use, duration, insertion, type and presence of insertion site infection of the CVC, laboratory data and number of CRBSI episodes. Nevertheless, a trend towards a higher success rate was observed for a dwell time of 24 h for the entire duration of ALT (88%; 22/25 vs. 66.7%; 8/12; p = 0.1827), while the use of taurolidine and the infections sustained by MDR bacteria were associated with a tendency toward greater failure (25%; 3/12 vs. 4%; 1/25; p = 0.1394; 60%; 6/10 vs. 33.3%; 8/24; p = 0.2522). No adverse events, except one CVC occlusion, were observed. ALT combined with systemic antibiotics appears to be an effective and safe strategy for treating children with CLABSI/CRBSI episodes.

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