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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 07 1997, 1784-1790, Vol 35, No. 7
I Atela, P Coll, J Rello, E Quintana, J Barrio, F March, F Sanchez, P Barraquer, J Ballus, A Cotura and G Prats
A prospective study of 45 central venous catheters was conducted to assess,
by strain delineation, the turnover of skin and catheter hub (superficial)
colonization and the relative contributions of catheter hub and skin
colonization to catheter tip colonization. Serial quantitative cultures of
skin and catheter hub were performed. Catheter tip, blood, and specimens
for culture from targeted superficial sites (TSSs) were also collected at
the time of catheter removal. Strains from 17 tip-positive catheters were
delineated by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Only 12 (28.6%) of 42 skin
strains and 14 (31.1%) of 45 catheter hub strains were found to be present
at the time of catheter removal. In addition, only 9 (29.0%) of the 31
tip-colonizing strains were present on TSSs. Moreover, 15 (48.4%) of the 31
tip- colonizing strains had a superficial origin, and the other 16 (51.6%)
were of unknown origin. In catheters suspected of infection, cultures of
TSSs had a negative predictive value for catheter-related bacteremia of
94.4% but a positive predictive value of 44.4%. When the causative agent
was identified (to the strain level) these values dropped to 80.9 and
18.7%, respectively. The study shows that skin and catheter hub
colonization is a common, dynamic phenomenon. Strains recovered from TSSs
showed a low level of correlation with strains from previous cultures of
specimens from superficial sites and catheter tip isolates. Consequently,
TSSs cannot be recommended for use in determining the therapy. However,
catheter-related bacteremia is uncommon when cultures of TSSs are negative.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Serial surveillance cultures of skin and catheter hub specimens from critically ill patients with central venous catheters: molecular epidemiology of infection and implications for clinical management and research
Department of Genetics and Microbiology, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Cerdanyola del Valles, Spain.
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