Ann Intern Med. 2013 Sep 17;159(6):401-10. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-159-6-201309170-00006.
Although the epidemiology of catheter-associated urinary tract infection is well-described, little is known about noninfectious complications resulting from urethral catheter use.
To determine the frequency of noninfectious complications after catheterization.
MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, CINAHL, Conference Papers Index, BIOSIS Previews, Scopus, and ClinicalTrials.gov were searched for human studies without any language limits and through 30 July 2012.
Clinical trials and observational studies assessing noninfectious complications of indwelling urethral catheters in adults.
Relevant studies were sorted into 3 categories: short-term catheterization in patients without spinal cord injury (SCI), long-term catheterization in patients without SCI, and catheterization in patients with SCI. The proportion of patients who had bladder cancer, bladder stones, blockage, false passage, gross hematuria, accidental removal, urine leakage, or urethral stricture was then pooled using random-effects models.
Thirty-seven studies (2868 patients) were pooled. Minor complications were common. For example, the pooled frequency of urine leakage ranged from 10.6% (95% CI, 2.4% to 17.7%) in short-term catheterization cohorts to 52.1% (CI, 28.6% to 69.5%) among outpatients with long-term indwelling catheters. Serious complications were also noted, including urethral strictures, which occurred in 3.4% (CI, 1.0% to 7.0%) of patients with short-term catheterization. For patients with SCI, 13.5% (CI, 3.4% to 21.9%) had gross hematuria and 1.0% (CI, 0.0% to 5.0%) developed bladder cancer.
Although heterogeneity existed across studies for several outcomes, most could be accounted for by differences between studies with respect to quality and sex composition. Evidence published after 30 July 2012 is not included.
Many noninfectious catheter-associated complications are at least as common as clinically significant urinary tract infections.
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
虽然导管相关性尿路感染的流行病学已得到充分描述,但对于尿道导管使用引起的非传染性并发症知之甚少。
确定置管后非传染性并发症的发生频率。
检索了 MEDLINE、EMBASE、Cochrane 中央对照试验注册库、CINAHL、会议论文索引、BIOSIS 预览、Scopus 和 ClinicalTrials.gov,这些数据库没有语言限制,检索时间截至 2012 年 7 月 30 日。
评估成人留置尿道导管的非传染性并发症的临床试验和观察性研究。
将相关研究分为 3 类:无脊髓损伤 (SCI) 患者的短期导管插入术、无 SCI 患者的长期导管插入术和 SCI 患者的导管插入术。然后,使用随机效应模型汇总发生膀胱癌、膀胱结石、阻塞、假道、肉眼血尿、意外拔除、尿漏或尿道狭窄的患者比例。
共纳入 37 项研究(2868 例患者)。轻微并发症很常见。例如,短期置管患者中尿漏的累积发生率为 10.6%(95%CI,2.4%至 17.7%),而门诊长期留置导管患者的发生率为 52.1%(CI,28.6%至 69.5%)。也有严重并发症的报道,包括尿道狭窄,发生率为 3.4%(CI,1.0%至 7.0%)。对于 SCI 患者,13.5%(CI,3.4%至 21.9%)有肉眼血尿,1.0%(CI,0.0%至 5.0%)发生膀胱癌。
尽管几项研究的结果存在异质性,但大多数可以通过研究之间的质量和性别构成差异来解释。2012 年 7 月 30 日以后发表的证据未包括在内。
许多非传染性导管相关并发症与临床上有意义的尿路感染一样常见。
美国卫生保健研究与质量局。