Publication Type : Journal Article
Publisher : Elsevier BV
Source : American Journal of Infection Control
Url : https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajic.2019.12.026
Keywords : Hospital infection, Device-associated infections, Antibiotic resistance, Peripheral line-associated bloodstream infections, Mortality, Surveillance
Campus : Faridabad
School : School of Medicine
Year : 2020
Abstract : Background
 Short-term peripheral venous catheters-related bloodstream infections (PVCR-BSIs) rates have not been systematically studied in developing countries, and data on their incidence by number of device-days are not available.
 
 Methods
 Prospective, surveillance study on PVCR-BSI conducted from September 1, 2013 to May 31, 2019 in 204 intensive care units (ICUs), members of the International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium (INICC), from 57 hospitals in 19 cities of India. We applied US INICC definition criteria and reported methods using the INICC Surveillance Online System.
 
 Results
 We followed 7,513 ICU patients for 296,893 bed-days and 295,795 short term peripheral venous catheter (PVC)-days. We identified 863 PVCR-BSIs, amounting to a rate of 2.91/1,000 PVC-days.
 Mortality in patients with PVC but without PVCR-BSI was 4.14%, and 11.59% in patients with PVCR-BSI. The length of stay in patients with PVC but without PVCR-BSI was 4.13 days, and 5.9 days in patients with PVCR-BSI. The micro-organism profile showed 68% of gram negative bacteria: Escherichia coli (23%), Klebsiella spp (15%), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (5%), and others. The predominant gram-positive bacteria were Staphylococcus aureus (10%).
 
 Conclusions
 PVCR-BSI rates found in our ICUs were much higher than rates published from industrialized countries. Infection prevention programs must be implemented to reduce the incidence of PVCR-BSIs.
Cite this Research Publication : Víctor Daniel Rosenthal, Debkishore Gupta, Prasad Rajhans, Sheila Nainan Myatra, S. Muralidharan, Yatin Mehta, Mohit Kharbanda, Camilla Rodrigues, Arpita Dwivedy, Sweta Shah, Aruna Poojary, Subhash Kumar Todi, Supriya Chabukswar, Mahuya Bhattacharyya, Bala Ramachandran, Nagarajan Ramakrishnan, Sujit Kar Purkayasta, Asmita Sagar Sakle, Siva Kumar, Anup R. Warrier, Maithili Satish Kavathekar, Samir Sahu, Aisha Mubarak, Nikhil Modi, Namita Jaggi, Nadimpalli Gita, Shakti Bedanta Mishra, Suneeta Sahu, Burhan Jawadwala, Dolatsinh Zala, Tenzin Zompa, Purva Mathur, Suhas Nirkhiwale, Sonali Vadi, Sanjeev Singh, Manoj Agarwal, Nagamani Sen, Anil Karlekar, D.P. Punia, Suresh Kumar, Ramachadran Gopinath, Pravin Kumar Nair, Murali Chakravarthy, Kavita Sandhu, Chandrika Kambam, Salil Kumar Mohanty, Ami Varaiya, Nirav Pandya, Vaibhavi R. Subhedar, M.R. Vanajakshi, Deepak Singla, Mayur Patel, Six-year multicenter study on short-term peripheral venous catheters-related bloodstream infection rates in 204 intensive care units of 57 hospitals in 19 cities of India: International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium (INICC) findings, American Journal of Infection Control, Elsevier BV, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajic.2019.12.026