In the intensive care unit, patients' care and secure drugs administration require a central venous catheter. These invasive devices can lead to complications, particularly infections. Most preventive recommendations focus on catheter insertion, line handling, and dressings. Few recommendations adress catheter dwell time, which is certainly the main source of infection. Part of the prevention strategy is the regular and systematic replacement of infusion sets , as they may become contaminated during use, mainly through the hands of healthcare professionals. Prolonged use increases the risk of infection. Infusion lines changes involve disconnecting the old sets, discarding infusion devices containing drug residues, and replacing them with new sterile devices. Current international guidelines recommend replacing these sets every 4 days, and the Center for Disease Control and Prevention recommends not exceeding 7 days. Replacing these devices requires the time of qualified nurses, numerous sterile medical devices, and medications. In addition to the intended effect on infection prevention, the procedure has impacts on workload and costs. The objective of the study is to demonstrate that changing infusion set every 7 days does not increase the rate of central venous catheters related infections compared with changing infusion set every 4 days.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
2,830
7-day infusion set replacement (Experimental arm) In this group, the infusion sets (the tubes and connectors used to deliver medications through the central venous catheter) will be changed once a week, every 7 days. During each replacement, all sets will be disconnected and replaced with new sterile ones.
4-day infusion set replacement (Active comparator arm) In this group, the infusion sets will be changed every 4 days, which reflects the most common international recommendation. The procedure is the same: all sets connected to the central venous catheter will be replaced with new sterile ones. This strategy represents the current standard of care and will serve as the comparison for the 7-day approach.
La Réunion University Hospital
Saint-Pierre, La Réunion, France
Albi Hospital
Albi, France
Angers University Hospital
Angers, France
Belfort Hospital
Belfort, France
Bourges Hospital
Bourges, France
Caen University Hospital
Caen, France
Chartres Hospital
Chartres, France
Cholet Hospital
Cholet, France
Colombes Hospital
Colombes, France
Corbeil-Essonnes Hospital
Corbeil-Essonnes, France
...and 10 more locations
Rate (%) of patients with with a central venous catheter-related infectious complication
Infectious complications include: 1. Catheter-related infections (CRI) defined as: * A positive catheter culture, with quantitative culture ≥10³ CFU/ml (Brun-Buisson technique) or, if not available, a semi-quantitative culture \>15 CFU (Maki technique), and purulence at the catheter insertion site or tunnelitis. Or * A positive catheter culture, with quantitative culture ≥10³ CFU/ml (or semi-quantitative culture \>15 CFU), and complete or partial regression of systemic signs of infection within 48 hours after catheter removal. 2. Catheter-related bloodstream infections (bacteremia or fungemia) defined as: * The occurrence of bacteremia (or fungemia) within 48 hours before or after catheter removal (or suspected catheter-related infection if the catheter is not immediately removed), And * Either a positive culture with the same microorganism from the insertion site or catheter, with ≥10³ CFU/ml (Brun-Buisson technique) or, if not available, a semi-quantitative culture
Time frame: From central venous catheter insertion until 48 hours after catheter removal during the ICU stay (censored at 90 days).
Central line-associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI)
Proportion of patients with central line-associated bloodstream infection
Time frame: Day 90
Non-central line-associated bloodstream infection
Proportion of patients with non-central line-associated bloodstream infection
Time frame: Day 90
Catheters with catheter colonization
Proportion of catheters with catheter colonization
Time frame: From central venous catheter insertion until 48 hours after catheter removal during the ICU stay (censored at 90 days).
Time to onset of central venous catheter-related infectious complication
Length of time (in days) before the onset of central venous catheter-related infectious complications
Time frame: Day 90
ICU length of stay
Length of ICU stay
Time frame: Day 90
All-cause ICU mortality
Number of patients who die from any cause during their ICU stay
Time frame: Day 90
Cumulative nursing time related to infusion set replacements
Total nursing time, measured in minutes, required to perform infusion set replacements, per 1000 catheter-days
Time frame: 1000 days
Cost of materials required for infusion set replacements
Cost (euros) of materials required for infusion set replacements, per 1000 cathéter days
Time frame: 1000 days
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