A Retrospective Quality Study of Hemodialysis Catheter-Related Bacteremia in a Danish Hospital

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

A Retrospective Quality Study of Hemodialysis Catheter-Related Bacteremia in a Danish Hospital. / Kaarup, Sophie; Olesen, Bente; Pourarsalan, Mahshid; Boesby, Lene; Brandi, Lisbet.

In: Open Journal of Nephrology, Vol. 6, No. 4, 2016, p. 111-121.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kaarup, S, Olesen, B, Pourarsalan, M, Boesby, L & Brandi, L 2016, 'A Retrospective Quality Study of Hemodialysis Catheter-Related Bacteremia in a Danish Hospital', Open Journal of Nephrology, vol. 6, no. 4, pp. 111-121. https://doi.org/10.4236/ojneph.2016.64014

APA

Kaarup, S., Olesen, B., Pourarsalan, M., Boesby, L., & Brandi, L. (2016). A Retrospective Quality Study of Hemodialysis Catheter-Related Bacteremia in a Danish Hospital. Open Journal of Nephrology, 6(4), 111-121. https://doi.org/10.4236/ojneph.2016.64014

Vancouver

Kaarup S, Olesen B, Pourarsalan M, Boesby L, Brandi L. A Retrospective Quality Study of Hemodialysis Catheter-Related Bacteremia in a Danish Hospital. Open Journal of Nephrology. 2016;6(4):111-121. https://doi.org/10.4236/ojneph.2016.64014

Author

Kaarup, Sophie ; Olesen, Bente ; Pourarsalan, Mahshid ; Boesby, Lene ; Brandi, Lisbet. / A Retrospective Quality Study of Hemodialysis Catheter-Related Bacteremia in a Danish Hospital. In: Open Journal of Nephrology. 2016 ; Vol. 6, No. 4. pp. 111-121.

Bibtex

@article{d8123138a76c4565bbc2423509ce32c0,
title = "A Retrospective Quality Study of Hemodialysis Catheter-Related Bacteremia in a Danish Hospital",
abstract = "Background: Hemodialysis catheter-related bacteremia (HD CRB) is a major complication of long-term hemodialysis (HD) therapy and bacteremia is secondary only to cardiovascular disease as the leading cause of death in patients receiving renal replacement therapy. A large part may be preventable and surveillance is a critical aspect of infection control and prevention. Aim: To analyze incidence, causative species, and treatment of HD CRB in adult chronic HD patients at Nordsjaellands Hospital (NOH), Denmark. Methods: All episodes of bacteremia in the Department of Cardiology, Nephrology and Endocrinology (KNEA), NOH from 2010 to 2013 were analyzed. Inclusion criteria: Adult chronic HD patients with a tunneled dialysis catheter diagnosed with HD CRB. Causative microorganism and antimicrobial treatment were recorded for each episode. Findings: Ninety-nine episodes of HD CRB in 72 patients were found with a mean incidence rate of 0.9/1000 catheter-days. Gram- positive bacteria were isolated in 71% of the episodes, gram-negative bacteria in 25%, both in 3%, and yeast in 1%. The most frequently isolated microorganisms were Staphylococcus aureus (33%), Coagulase-negative staphylococci (29%), enterobacteriaceae (20%) and enterococci (8%). The most commonly used empiric antimicrobials were cefuroxime and vancomycin and the overall efficacy was 77%. Conclusion: The well-functioning infection prevention strategy seems to be successful resulting in a relatively low incidence rate of HD CRB compared with that shown in international studies. The high proportion of gram-negative bacteria raises the question as to whether future antimicrobial guidelines should cover both gram-positive and gram- negative bacteria.",
author = "Sophie Kaarup and Bente Olesen and Mahshid Pourarsalan and Lene Boesby and Lisbet Brandi",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.4236/ojneph.2016.64014",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
pages = "111--121",
journal = "Open Journal of Nephrology",
issn = "2164-2842",
publisher = "Scientific Research Publishing, Inc.",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A Retrospective Quality Study of Hemodialysis Catheter-Related Bacteremia in a Danish Hospital

AU - Kaarup, Sophie

AU - Olesen, Bente

AU - Pourarsalan, Mahshid

AU - Boesby, Lene

AU - Brandi, Lisbet

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Background: Hemodialysis catheter-related bacteremia (HD CRB) is a major complication of long-term hemodialysis (HD) therapy and bacteremia is secondary only to cardiovascular disease as the leading cause of death in patients receiving renal replacement therapy. A large part may be preventable and surveillance is a critical aspect of infection control and prevention. Aim: To analyze incidence, causative species, and treatment of HD CRB in adult chronic HD patients at Nordsjaellands Hospital (NOH), Denmark. Methods: All episodes of bacteremia in the Department of Cardiology, Nephrology and Endocrinology (KNEA), NOH from 2010 to 2013 were analyzed. Inclusion criteria: Adult chronic HD patients with a tunneled dialysis catheter diagnosed with HD CRB. Causative microorganism and antimicrobial treatment were recorded for each episode. Findings: Ninety-nine episodes of HD CRB in 72 patients were found with a mean incidence rate of 0.9/1000 catheter-days. Gram- positive bacteria were isolated in 71% of the episodes, gram-negative bacteria in 25%, both in 3%, and yeast in 1%. The most frequently isolated microorganisms were Staphylococcus aureus (33%), Coagulase-negative staphylococci (29%), enterobacteriaceae (20%) and enterococci (8%). The most commonly used empiric antimicrobials were cefuroxime and vancomycin and the overall efficacy was 77%. Conclusion: The well-functioning infection prevention strategy seems to be successful resulting in a relatively low incidence rate of HD CRB compared with that shown in international studies. The high proportion of gram-negative bacteria raises the question as to whether future antimicrobial guidelines should cover both gram-positive and gram- negative bacteria.

AB - Background: Hemodialysis catheter-related bacteremia (HD CRB) is a major complication of long-term hemodialysis (HD) therapy and bacteremia is secondary only to cardiovascular disease as the leading cause of death in patients receiving renal replacement therapy. A large part may be preventable and surveillance is a critical aspect of infection control and prevention. Aim: To analyze incidence, causative species, and treatment of HD CRB in adult chronic HD patients at Nordsjaellands Hospital (NOH), Denmark. Methods: All episodes of bacteremia in the Department of Cardiology, Nephrology and Endocrinology (KNEA), NOH from 2010 to 2013 were analyzed. Inclusion criteria: Adult chronic HD patients with a tunneled dialysis catheter diagnosed with HD CRB. Causative microorganism and antimicrobial treatment were recorded for each episode. Findings: Ninety-nine episodes of HD CRB in 72 patients were found with a mean incidence rate of 0.9/1000 catheter-days. Gram- positive bacteria were isolated in 71% of the episodes, gram-negative bacteria in 25%, both in 3%, and yeast in 1%. The most frequently isolated microorganisms were Staphylococcus aureus (33%), Coagulase-negative staphylococci (29%), enterobacteriaceae (20%) and enterococci (8%). The most commonly used empiric antimicrobials were cefuroxime and vancomycin and the overall efficacy was 77%. Conclusion: The well-functioning infection prevention strategy seems to be successful resulting in a relatively low incidence rate of HD CRB compared with that shown in international studies. The high proportion of gram-negative bacteria raises the question as to whether future antimicrobial guidelines should cover both gram-positive and gram- negative bacteria.

U2 - 10.4236/ojneph.2016.64014

DO - 10.4236/ojneph.2016.64014

M3 - Journal article

VL - 6

SP - 111

EP - 121

JO - Open Journal of Nephrology

JF - Open Journal of Nephrology

SN - 2164-2842

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 181208503