Dept. of Internal Medicine & Pediatrics, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
INSERM, IAME UMR 1137, University of Paris, France; Department of Bacteriology, Bichat-Claude Bernard Hospital, APHP, Paris, France.
Intensive Crit Care Nurs. 2022 Jun;70:103227. doi: 10.1016/j.iccn.2022.103227. Epub 2022 Mar 3.
Patients in intensive care units (ICUs) are at high risk for healthcare-acquired infections (HAI) due to the high prevalence of invasive procedures and devices, induced immunosuppression, comorbidity, frailty and increased age. Over the past decade we have seen a successful reduction in the incidence of HAI related to invasive procedures and devices. However, the rate of ICU-acquired infections remains high. Within this context, the ongoing emergence of new pathogens, further complicates treatment and threatens patient outcomes. Additionally, the SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) pandemic highlighted the challenge that an emerging pathogen provides in adapting prevention measures regarding both the risk of exposure to caregivers and the need to maintain quality of care. ICU nurses hold a special place in the prevention and management of HAI as they are involved in basic hygienic care, steering and implementing quality improvement initiatives, correct microbiological sampling, and aspects antibiotic stewardship. The emergence of more sensitive microbiological techniques and our increased knowledge about interactions between critically ill patients and their microbiota are leading us to rethink how we define HAIs and best strategies to diagnose, treat and prevent these infections in the ICU. This multidisciplinary expert review, focused on the ICU setting, will summarise the recent epidemiology of ICU-HAI, discuss the place of modern microbiological techniques in their diagnosis, review operational and epidemiological definitions and redefine the place of several controversial preventive measures including antimicrobial-impregnated medical devices, chlorhexidine-impregnated washcloths, catheter dressings and chlorhexidine-based mouthwashes. Finally, general guidance is suggested that may reduce HAI incidence and especially outbreaks in ICUs.
重症监护病房 (ICU) 的患者由于侵入性操作和设备的广泛应用、诱导性免疫抑制、合并症、虚弱和年龄增长,存在发生医院获得性感染 (HAI) 的高风险。在过去的十年中,我们已经看到与侵入性操作和设备相关的 HAI 发生率有所降低。然而,ICU 获得性感染的发生率仍然很高。在这种情况下,新病原体的不断出现,进一步使治疗复杂化,并威胁到患者的预后。此外,SARS-CoV-2(COVID-19)大流行凸显了新出现的病原体带来的挑战,这不仅体现在医护人员接触风险方面的预防措施需要不断调整,还体现在维持护理质量方面。ICU 护士在 HAI 的预防和管理中具有特殊地位,因为他们参与基本的卫生保健、指导和实施质量改进计划、正确的微生物采样以及抗生素管理方面的工作。更敏感的微生物技术的出现以及我们对重症患者及其微生物组之间相互作用的了解不断增加,促使我们重新思考如何定义 HAI 以及在 ICU 中诊断、治疗和预防这些感染的最佳策略。这篇多学科专家综述聚焦于 ICU 环境,将总结 ICU-HAI 的近期流行病学,讨论现代微生物技术在其诊断中的作用,回顾操作和流行病学定义,并重新定义包括抗菌浸渍医疗器械、洗必泰浸渍毛巾、导管敷料和洗必泰漱口液在内的几种有争议的预防措施的地位。最后,提出了一般性的指导建议,以降低 HAI 的发生率,特别是 ICU 中的暴发。