Department of Surgery, Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, University of Miami, Miami, Florida.
Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California.
JACC Clin Electrophysiol. 2018 Feb;4(2):201-208. doi: 10.1016/j.jacep.2017.09.178. Epub 2017 Nov 15.
This study sought to evaluate the impact of abandoned cardiovascular implantable electronic device (CIED) leads on the presentation and management of device-related infections.
Device infection is a serious consequence of CIEDs and necessitates removal of all hardware for attempted cure. The merits of extracting or retaining presumed sterile but nonfunctioning leads is a subject of ongoing debate.
The MEDIC (Multicenter Electrophysiologic Device Infection Cohort) prospectively enrolled patients with CIED infections at 10 institutions in the United States and abroad between January 1, 2009, and December 31, 2012. Within a propensity-matched cohort, relevant clinical information was compared between patients who had 1 or more abandoned leads at the time of infection and those who had none.
Matching produced a cohort of 264 patients, including 176 with no abandoned leads and 88 with abandoned leads. The groups were balanced with respect to Charlson comorbidity index, oldest lead age, device type, sex, and race. At the time of admission, those with abandoned leads were less likely to demonstrate systemic signs of infection, including leukocytosis (p = 0.023) and positive blood cultures (p = 0.005). Conversely, patients with abandoned leads were more likely to demonstrate local signs of infections, including skin erosion (p = 0.031) and positive pocket cultures (p = 0.015). In addition, patients with abandoned leads were more likely to require laser extraction (p = 0.010).
The results of a large prospective registry of CIED infections demonstrated that patients with abandoned leads may present with different signs, symptoms, and microbiological findings and require laser extraction more than those without abandoned leads.
本研究旨在评估废弃心血管植入式电子设备(CIED)导线对器械相关感染的表现和处理的影响。
器械感染是 CIED 的严重后果,需要移除所有硬件以尝试治愈。提取或保留疑似无菌但无功能导线的优点是一个正在讨论的话题。
MEDIC(多中心电生理设备感染队列)前瞻性地在 2009 年 1 月 1 日至 2012 年 12 月 31 日期间,在美国和国外的 10 个机构招募了患有 CIED 感染的患者。在倾向匹配队列中,比较了感染时具有 1 个或多个废弃导线的患者和无废弃导线的患者之间的相关临床信息。
匹配产生了一个 264 例患者的队列,其中 176 例无废弃导线,88 例有废弃导线。两组在 Charlson 合并症指数、最旧导线年龄、器械类型、性别和种族方面平衡。入院时,具有废弃导线的患者不太可能出现全身性感染迹象,包括白细胞增多(p = 0.023)和阳性血培养(p = 0.005)。相反,具有废弃导线的患者更有可能出现局部感染迹象,包括皮肤侵蚀(p = 0.031)和阳性口袋培养(p = 0.015)。此外,具有废弃导线的患者更有可能需要激光提取(p = 0.010)。
一项大型前瞻性 CIED 感染登记研究的结果表明,具有废弃导线的患者可能表现出不同的体征、症状和微生物学发现,并比无废弃导线的患者更需要激光提取。