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Multicenter Study
. 2021 Jan;22(1):34-41.
doi: 10.1177/1129729820917259. Epub 2020 May 14.

Six-year study on peripheral venous catheter-associated BSI rates in 262 ICUs in eight countries of South-East Asia: International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium findings

Víctor Daniel Rosenthal  1 Ider Bat-Erdene  2 Debkishore Gupta  3   4 Prasad Rajhans  5 Sheila Nainan Myatra  6 S Muralidharan  7 Yatin Mehta  8 Vineya Rai  9 Nguyen Viet Hung  10 Montri Luxsuwong  11 Audrey Rose D Tapang  12 Xiuqin Guo  13 Andrew Trotter  14 Mohit Kharbanda  15 Camilla Rodrigues  16 Arpita Dwivedy  17 Sweta Shah  18 Aruna Poojary  19 Subhash Kumar Todi  20 Supriya Chabukswar  21 Mahuya Bhattacharyya  22 Bala Ramachandran  23 Nagarajan Ramakrishnan  24 Sujit Kar Purkayasta  25 Asmita Sagar Sakle  26 Siva Kumar  27 Anup R Warrier  28 Maithili Satish Kavathekar  29 Samir Sahu  30 Aisha Mubarak  31 Nikhil Modi  32 Namita Jaggi  33 Nadimpalli Gita  34 Shakti Bedanta Mishra  35 Suneeta Sahu  36 Burhan Jawadwala  37 Dolatsinh Zala  38 Tenzin Zompa  39 Purva Mathur  40 Suhas Nirkhiwale  41 Sonali Vadi  42 Sanjeev Singh  43 Manoj Agarwal  44 Nagamani Sen  45 Anil Karlekar  46 D P Punia  47 Suresh Kumar  48 Ramachadran Gopinath  49 Pravin Kumar Nair  50 Chin Seng Gan  51 Murali Chakravarthy  52 Kavita Sandhu  53 Chandrika Kambam  54 Salil Kumar Mohanty  55 Ami Varaiya  56 Nirav Pandya  57 Vaibhavi R Subhedar  58 M R Vanajakshi  59 Deepak Singla  60 M Tuvshinbayar  61 Mayur Patel  62 Guxiang Ye  63 Lucy Chai See Lum  64 Rhendra Hardy Mohamad Zaini  65 Byambadorj Batkhuu  66 Kimberley M Dayapera  67 Le Thu Nguyet  68 Regina Berba  69 Maria Carmen Sg Buenaflor  70 Josephine Anne Ng  71 Nirada Siriyakorn  72 Le Thi Anh Thu  73   74
Affiliations
Multicenter Study

Six-year study on peripheral venous catheter-associated BSI rates in 262 ICUs in eight countries of South-East Asia: International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium findings

Víctor Daniel Rosenthal et al. J Vasc Access. 2021 Jan.

Abstract

Background: Short-term peripheral venous catheter-associated bloodstream infection rates have not been systematically studied in Asian countries, and data on peripheral venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections incidence by number of short-term peripheral venous catheter days are not available.

Methods: Prospective, surveillance study on peripheral venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections conducted from 1 September 2013 to 31 May 2019 in 262 intensive care units, members of the International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium, from 78 hospitals in 32 cities of 8 countries in the South-East Asia Region: China, India, Malaysia, Mongolia, Nepal, Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam. For this research, we applied definition and criteria of the CDC NHSN, methodology of the INICC, and software named INICC Surveillance Online System.

Results: We followed 83,295 intensive care unit patients for 369,371 bed-days and 376,492 peripheral venous catheter-days. We identified 999 peripheral venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections, amounting to a rate of 2.65/1000 peripheral venous catheter-days. Mortality in patients with peripheral venous catheter but without peripheral venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections was 4.53% and 12.21% in patients with peripheral venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections. The mean length of stay in patients with peripheral venous catheter but without peripheral venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections was 4.40 days and 7.11 days in patients with peripheral venous catheter and peripheral venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections. The microorganism profile showed 67.1% were Gram-negative bacteria: Escherichia coli (22.9%), Klebsiella spp (10.7%), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (5.3%), Enterobacter spp. (4.5%), and others (23.7%). The predominant Gram-positive bacteria were Staphylococcus aureus (11.4%).

Conclusions: Infection prevention programs must be implemented to reduce the incidence of peripheral venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections.

Keywords: Hospital infection; antibiotic resistance; device-associated infections; intensive care unit; mortality; peripheral line–associated bloodstream infections; surveillance.

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