多中心观察研究 CleanHandPROX:在近端操作中心管导管毂时戴无菌手套的影响。

IF 4.8 2区 医学 Q1 INFECTIOUS DISEASES Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control Pub Date : 2024-10-06 DOI:10.1186/s13756-024-01467-5
Sandra Dos Santos, Anne-Sophie Valentin, Mathilde Farizon, Nathalie van der Mee-Marquet
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:使用中心管路的患者发生菌血症的风险增加。预防晚期导管相关感染有赖于在操作中心管路导管毂时(例如,在连接、断开、抽血、脉冲冲洗或在中心导管首次连接后进行注射时)采取各种措施。在这些措施中,法国的指南要求在近端操作前立即戴上无菌手套,以防止在准备过程中污染导管毂。据我们所知,还没有研究报告过在这些操作过程中佩戴无菌手套的依从性,也没有报告过不佩戴无菌手套对医护人员(HCWs)在操作接头前手指清洁度的影响:我们进行了一项由两部分组成的研究,以评估医护人员戴无菌手套的依从性,并提供直接的微生物学证据,证明在不戴无菌手套的情况下,医护人员的手在操作中心管路前会受到细菌污染。首先,在使用标准化网格对中心管路进行近端操作时观察无菌手套的使用情况。其次,我们检查了每位被观察的医护人员在近端操作前手指上的微生物菌群:共有来自 35 家医疗机构的 260 名医护人员在近端操作过程中接受了观察。医护人员分为三组:188 人使用无菌手套(72%),23 人使用非无菌手套(9%),49 人未戴手套(19%)。对指尖进行拭抹后,72 个样本(28%)发现了微生物培养物。共鉴定出 97 种微生物,均为公认的导管相关菌血症病原体,主要是凝固酶阴性葡萄球菌(36 例)和芽孢杆菌(31 例)。与戴无菌手套(12/23;52%)或不戴手套(33/49;67%)的医护人员相比,戴无菌手套的医护人员的指尖污染率较低(27/188;14%)(p 结论:我们的数据支持了戴无菌手套对导管相关菌血症的积极影响:我们的数据支持无菌手套在确保中心管近端操作过程中指尖清洁方面的积极作用,这是预防晚期导管相关菌血症的关键措施。七名医护人员中就有一人的无菌手套受到污染,这凸显了在近端操作过程中保持护理环境清洁并尽量减少与患者皮肤和周围环境接触的必要性。
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Impact of sterile gloving during proximal manipulation of central line catheter hub: the multicenter observational study CleanHandPROX.

Background: Patients with central lines face an increased risk of developing bacteremia. Preventing late-onset catheter-related infections relies on implementing various measures during manipulations of the catheter hub of central lines (e.g., during connections, disconnections, blood withdrawals, pulsed rinses, or injections performed at the first connection after the central catheter). French guidelines include, among these measures, the requirement to put on sterile gloves immediately before proximal manipulation to help prevent contamination of the catheter hub during preparation. To our knowledge, no study has reported compliance with wearing sterile gloves during these manipulations, nor the impact of not wearing sterile gloves on the cleanliness of the fingers of healthcare workers (HCWs) just before manipulating the connectors.

Methods: We conducted a two-part study to assess compliance with sterile gloving and to provide direct microbiological evidence of bacterial contamination on HCWs' hands immediately before the manipulation of central lines when sterile gloving is not used. First, the use of sterile gloves was observed during proximal manipulations of central lines using a standardized grid. Second, we examined the microbial flora present on the fingers of each observed HCW just before proximal manipulation.

Results: A total of 260 HCWs from 35 healthcare institutions were observed during proximal manipulation. The HCWs were distributed into three groups: 188 used sterile gloves (72%), 23 used nonsterile gloves (9%), and 49 did not wear gloves (19%). The swabbing of the fingertips revealed microbial cultures from 72 samples (28%). A total of 97 microorganisms were identified, all of which are well-recognized agents responsible for catheter-related bacteremia, predominantly coagulase-negative staphylococci (n = 36) and Bacillus sp. (n = 31). Fingertip contamination was lower for HCWs wearing sterile gloves (27/188; 14%) than for those wearing nonsterile gloves (12/23; 52%) or not wearing gloves (33/49; 67%) (p < 0.001). The contaminants were similar across the three groups.

Conclusions: Our data support the positive impact of sterile gloving in ensuring clean fingertips during proximal manipulation of central lines, a key measure in preventing late-onset catheter-related bacteremia. The contamination of sterile gloves in one out of seven HCWs highlights the need for a clean care environment and minimal contact with the patient's skin and surroundings during proximal manipulation.

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来源期刊
Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control
Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH -INFECTIOUS DISEASES
CiteScore
9.70
自引率
3.60%
发文量
140
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control is a global forum for all those working on the prevention, diagnostic and treatment of health-care associated infections and antimicrobial resistance development in all health-care settings. The journal covers a broad spectrum of preeminent practices and best available data to the top interventional and translational research, and innovative developments in the field of infection control.
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