Early identification of local infections in central venous catheters for hemodialysis: A systematic review
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Cobo-Sánchez, José Luis; Blanco-Mavillard, Ian; Mancebo-Salas, Noelia; Moya-Mier, Susana; González-Menéndez, Faustino; Renedo-González, Cristina; Lázaro Otero, Mercedes
Fecha
2023Derechos
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Publicado en
Journal of Infection and Public Health, 2023, 16(7), 1023-1032
Editorial
Elsevier
Enlace a la publicación
Palabras clave
Hemodialysis
Central Venous Catheter
Local Infection
Exit Site Infection
Tunnel Infection
Early Diagnosis
Nursing Assessment
Systematic Review
Resumen/Abstract
Background
The use of central venous catheters (CVC) is associated with higher morbidity and mortality, related to infectious complications, contributing to poorer clinical outcomes and increased healthcare costs. According to the literature, the incidence of local infections related to CVC for hemodialysis is highly variable. This variability is related to differences in definitions of catheter-related infections.
Objective
To identify signs and symptoms for determining local infections (exit site and tunnel tract infections) used in the literature in tunnelled and nontunnelled CVC for hemodialysis.
Design
Systematic review
Methods
Structured electronic searches were conducted in five electronic databases, from 1 January 2000-31 August 2022, using key words and specific vocabulary, as well as manual searches in several journals. Additionally, vascular access clinical guidelines and infection control clinical guidelines were reviewed.
Results
After validity analysis, we selected 40 studies and seven clinical guidelines. The definitions of exit site infection and tunnel infection used in the different studies were heterogeneous. Among the studies, seven (17,5 %) used the definitions of exit site and tunnel infection based on a clinical practice guideline. Three of the studies (7.5 %) used the Twardowski scale definition of exit site infection or a modification. The remaining 30 studies (75 %) used different combinations of signs and symptoms.
Conclusions
Definitions of local CVC infections are highly heterogeneous in the revised literature. It is necessary to establish a consensus regarding the definitions of hemodialysis CVC exit site and tunnel infections
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