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Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition...

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Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin
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Page 1: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Alternate Lock Solutions in

Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition

Deborah Andris MSN APNP

Division of Colorectal Surgery

Medical College of Wisconsin

Page 2: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Objectives

• Discuss alternate catheter lock solutions for central venous access devices

• List potential usefulness in patients receiving long-term PN

Page 3: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Parenteral Nutrition (PN)

• Nutrition given directly into bloodstream via CVC

• Bypasses normal digestion in the gut

• Complete nutritional needs met

• Can be short or long term

• Goal of Home PN– Maintain nutritional status; minimize

complications

Page 4: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Impact of CLABSI in Home PN Patient

• Most common infectious complication

• Compounded in patients with limited access sites

• Contributes to increased healthcare costs– $33,000 to $65,000 per episode– $2.3 billion annually in U.S.

• Estimated attributable mortality 12-35% per infection

Pitet D, JAMA 1994;271:1598Orsi GB, Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2002;23:190

Page 5: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Impact of CLABSI in Home PN Patient

• Increased Risk for CLABSI– pH and nutritional components– Dextrose supports bacterial growth– Fat emulsion supports growth of fungi– S. epidermidis most common organism

• Typical presentation

Beraud G, Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis May 2012; Epub

Page 6: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Impact of CLABSI in Home PN Patient

• Frequent hospitalizations– Increased LOS

• Loss of work/family time

• Interruption of nutrition support

• Loss of access

• Depression

• Increased risk for septic complications, chronic thrombosis, and antibiotic resistance

Page 7: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Page 8: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Page 9: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Intraluminal Colonization and Biofilms

“Bacteria prefer a community based, surface bound, sedentary lifestyle to a nomadic existence”

W. Michael Dunne

• Costerton, 1978– First theory of biofilm adhesion

Page 10: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Biofilms Defined

• Sessile microbial community

• Organisms produce an extracellular polymeric substance (matrix)

• Forms within 3 days of catheter insertion

• Intraluminal biofilm formation predominates after 30 days

Donlan RM, CID 2011;52:1038

Page 11: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Intraluminal Colonization and Biofilms

Influences on Biofilm Formation

• Catheter material

• Presence of conditioning film

• Hydrodynamics

• Physical/chemical properties of liquid in contact with device

• Properties of microbial cell surface

Page 12: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Intraluminal Colonization and Biofilms

Organisms Commonly Associated with Biofilms• Candida albicans• Coagulase-negative staphylococci• Enterococcus spp.• Klebsiella pneumoniae• Pseudomonas aeruginosa• Staphylococcus aureus

Page 13: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

AntibioticsAntibiotics

AntibodiesAntibodies

Glycocalyx EnclosedGlycocalyx EnclosedMicrocolonyMicrocolony

PROTECTIONPROTECTION

NUTRIENT TRAPPINGNUTRIENT TRAPPING

ADHERENCEADHERENCE

Catheter SurfaceCatheter Surface

PhagocytesPhagocytes

Page 14: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

“Established” Biofilm• Patient symptoms elicited when

aggregates of cells, endotoxins or other pyrogenic substances are dispersed

• Extracellular polymeric substance matrix prevents perfusion of antimicrobial

• Organisms are dormant

• Biofilm environment adversely affects antimicrobial activity

Page 15: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

SEM of S. epidermidis on intraluminal surface of SEM of S. epidermidis on intraluminal surface of Hickman catheterHickman catheter

Page 16: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

TEM of S. epidermidis on intraluminal surface of Hickman TEM of S. epidermidis on intraluminal surface of Hickman cathetercatheter

Page 17: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Historical Perspective

• 1988 Messing reported use of ABL in home PN patients

• Initial studies/use focused on antibiotics

• Chelating agents and ethanol followed

• 1988-1994 - 6 papers

1994-2003 – 35 papers

2003-2012 – 122 papers

Page 18: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Rationale for Use of Antibiotic Lock

• Catheter is colonized intraluminally

• Allows for adequate drug to be delivered to site of colonization

• Goal of therapy– Sterilize catheter lumen– Eliminate biofilm

Messing B, JPEN 1988;12:185

Page 19: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

“Lock” Therapy Defined

• Antimicrobial or antiseptic solution instilled into the CVAD

• Dwells intraluminally; various times

• Commonly used antibiotics

• Prevention– High risk patient populations

• Treatment

Page 20: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Current Use of ABL

• Recent literature review

• ABL effective– High concentration of antibiotic– Dwell times > 12 h– Duration of 14 days of treatment

• Optimal concentration and duration unknown

Donlan RM, CID 2011;52:1038

Page 21: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

ABL Risks

• Antibiotic resistance

• Stability of antimicrobials

• Expense

• Availability

Page 22: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Lock Therapy

• CDC guidelines do not recommend use of prophylactic antibiotic lock except in patients with history of multiple CR-BSI

• Ethanol as a locking agent is not approved by the FDA or the IDSA

Page 23: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Novel Catheter Lock Strategies

• Avoid use of antimicrobial agents

• May combine with antimicrobials

• Potential Applications:– Eliminate biofilm formation on indwelling

catheters– Prevent re-growth of organisms on device– Resolve patient symptoms

Page 24: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Novel Catheter Lock Strategies

• Chelating Agents– Disodium or Tetrasodium EDTA– Sodium Citrate

• Ethanol

• Biofilm Dispersants

• Bacteriophage

Donlan RM, CID 2011;52:1038

Page 25: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Chelating Agents• Metal cations maintain the biofilm matrix

• Validated in human studies

• Action– Antimicrobial effects

• Chelates metal ions essential for structural integrity of gram negative organisms

• Releases endogenous phospholipases• Mechanism against gram positive organisms

unknown

– Destabilizes biofilm structureDonlan RM, CID 2011;52:1038

Page 26: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Chelating Agents

• Potential Application– Lock to remove established biofilm,

bacteria, and fungi– Used in combination with antimicrobial

agents– 40 mg/mL concentration– Tetrasodium EDTA may have improved

spectrum of activity– Resistance does not develop over time

Page 27: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Research

• Raad, 1997– EDTA with minocycline showed to impact on the prevention of CLABSI in

patients with recurrent infections– Suggested EDTA alone may be effective

• Kite, 2004– Demonstrated efficacy of tetrasodium EDTA to eradicate biofilm from

hemodialysis catheters in vivo

• Percival, 2005– In vitro model demonstrating tetrasodium EDTA could eradicate biofilms

• Brookstaver, 2009 – In vitro model demonstrated significant reduction of biofilms from

staphylococcus spp and P. aeruginosa in hickman catheter segments with disodium EDTA in combination with a variety of antibiotics

Raad I, CID 1997;25:149

Kite P, J Clin Microbiol 2004;42:3073

Percival S, Inf Control and Hosp Epidemiol 2005;26:515

Bookstaver PB, Annals of Pharmacotherapy 2009;43:210

Page 28: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Ethanol Lock

• Validated in human studies

• Action – Antimicrobial – Penetrates the extracellular polymeric

substance – Denatures protein

Donlan RM, CID 2011;52:1038

Page 29: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Ethanol Lock

• Potential Application– Lock treatment to remove established biofilm and

bacteria– Emerged as preventive strategy

• Benefits over ABL– No concern for resistance– Bacteriacidal/fungicidal properties– Not dependent on sensitivity to antimicrobials– Inexpensive– Increased value in multi-drug resistant organisms

Page 30: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Ethanol Lock Technique

• 3 mL 70% ethanol solution; compounded in pharmacy and placed in pre-filled syringe

• Begin use immediately after CVC placed• Administer after cycled PN and allow to dwell

maximum time patient disconnected from infusion

• Use only in silicone catheters• Flush line with NS• Incompatible with heparin or citrated liquids

Maiefski M, Inf Control and Hosp Epidem 2009;30:1096

Page 31: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Research - Safety

• Crinch, 2005– Studied mechanical properties of

polyurethane and silicone catheters in vitro– Exposed catheters to 70% ethanol for 10

weeks– Negligible impact on integrity – Results suggest use of ethanol lock safe in

both catheter typesCrinch CJ, Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2005;26:708

Page 32: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Research - Stability

• Cober, 2007

• Studied stability of 70% ethanol in syringes

• Concluded solution stable for 14 days

• According to USP Chapter 797 guidelines - stable for 9 days

Cober MP, Am J Health Syst Pharm 2007;64:2480

Page 33: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Clinical Research

• Opilla, 2007

• Retrospective review

• 9 adult home PN patients with history of recurrent infection

• 70% ethanol; 2-4 hour dwell time

• Demonstrated decrease in infection rate from 8.3/1000 days to 0.3/1000 days with use of prophylactic lock

Opilla MT, JPEN 2007;31:302

Page 34: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Clinical Research

• John, 2012• Retrospective review• 31 adult home PN patients with history of recurrent infection; all

on prophylactic locks• PICC’s and Tunneled catheters• Outcomes were compared pre and post ethanol lock with each

patient serving as their own control• 70% ethanol; dwell times varied• Results:

– 273 CLABSI related admissions pre ethanol lock vs 47 post ethanol lock– Decrease in positive quantitative cultures from 96 pre-lock to 12 post-lock– Reduction in need for catheter change

Bijo J, JPEN 2012;36:603

Page 35: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Biofilm Dispersants

• Not validated in human studies

• Action: disperses cells from the biofilm surface

• Potential Application– Lock to remove established biofilm,

bacteria, and fungi– Used in combination with antimicrobial

agents

Page 36: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Bacteriophage

• Used in the 1920’s and 1930’s to treat bacterial infections

• Not validated in human studies• Action:

– Virus infects bacteria and injects it’s genetic material

– Antibacterial properties– Degrades the EPS

Page 37: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Bacteriophage

• Potential Application– Decrease bacterial attachment– Kill biofilm associated cells– Eradicate the biofilm matrix

• Pretreatment of the catheter

• Lock therapy

Page 38: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012Electron micrograph of Bacteriophages

Page 39: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

The Future• Nitric Oxide

– Releases NO from coated catheter surface– Augments immune system

• GlmU Enzyme Inhibitor– Antimicrobial; anti-adhesin– Pre-treat catheter to prevent adhesion

• RIP Quorum-Sensing Inhibitor– Inhibits quorum sensing needed for S.

aureus biofilm formation– Injection

Page 40: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Application to the Infusion Therapy

Nurse• Understanding of the impact of biofilms on treatment

of CLABSI will help practitioners to plan and evaluate their care

• Elimination of biofilms remains a challenge• Important to have increased awareness of alternative

approaches for the treatment/prevention of CLABSI that avoid use of antibiotics

• New therapy goals: – eliminate biofilm – prevent regrowth of organisms– resolve patient symptoms

Page 41: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012

Application to the Infusion Therapy Nurse

Research Opportunities

• Questions related to technique– Optimal concentration– Dwell times– “To flush or not to flush”

• Cost savings analysis

• Impact on QOL in Home PN patients

Page 42: Dallas, TX November 2–4, 2012 Alternate Lock Solutions in Patients Receiving Parenteral Nutrition Deborah Andris MSN APNP Division of Colorectal Surgery.

Dallas, TX • November 2–4, 2012


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