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Updates in preventative strategies in the ICU
Preventing Ventilator Associated Pneumonia (VAP)
- Traditionally ICUs use techniques such as head of bed elevation> 30 degrees, chlorhexidine mouth rinses, reduced sedation, and controlling cuff pressure between 20-30 cm H2O to reduce VAP
- A new trial confirms that subglottic suctioning also reduces VAP
- Endotracheal tubes are made with a suction line along the edge with fenestrations below the vocal cords and above the cuff
- This is hooked to wall suction removing secretions before they are aspirated
- VAP rates are very low in the US (most likely due to under-reporting)
- It is reported at around 15 VAPs/ 1000 ventilator days in Europe
The trial
- 5 ICUs in Belgium; 352 total patients with suctioning vs control were randomized
- Reduced incidence of confirmed VAP 9% vs 18%, decrease ventilator days 10 vs 20 and antibiotic use 7% absolute reduction
Bottom Line
- More expensive around $20 or more vs $1 for a regular ETT
- NNT around 11 to prevent one VAP: it is cost efficient
- Use them in patients who will remain intubated for > 48hrs (not elective surgical patients)
Daily bathing with chlorhexidine does not reduce health care associated infections
- It is believed that daily bathing with chlorhexidine antibiotic washes decrease rates of infection in the ICU; this is debatable
The trial
- One center, 5 ICUs, 9340 patients
- 10 week cleaning period followed by a two week washout then crossover to the alternate treatment (non-antibiotic washes)
- Looking for CLABSIs, CAUTIs, VAP and C. diff infections
- 55 infections occurred in the chlorhexidine group; 60 in the control goup.
- 2.86 per 1000 patient days (chlorhexidine group) vs 2.9 per 1000 patient days (control)
Bottom Line
- Does not appear to be helpful (perhaps specific patient groups such as bone marrow units may benefit)
- More expensive to use these washes and can lead to resistance
- Very well designed study with a variety of ICUs used (although one center)
References
Chlorhexidine Bathing and Health Care Associated InfectionsA Randomized Clinical Trial
JAMA. 2015;313(4):369-378. doi:10.1001/jama.2014.18400.
Crit Care Med. 2015 Jan;43(1):22-30. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000000674.
Prevention of ventilator-associated pneumonia and ventilator-associated conditions: a randomized controlled trial with subglottic secretion suctioning*.
Damas P1, Frippiat F, Ancion A, Canivet JL, Lambermont B, Layios N, Massion P, Morimont P, Nys M, Piret S, Lancellotti P, Wiesen P, D'orio V, Samalea N,Ledoux D.