Khan Sarah, Tsang Kara K, Hu Zheng Jing, Mostowiak Beata, El Helou Salhab, Science Michelle, Kaufman David, Pernica Jeffrey, Thabane Lehana, Mertz Dominik, Loeb Mark
McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada.
McMaster Children's Hospital, 1200 Main St. West, 3A, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2023 Mar 23;9(1):50. doi: 10.1186/s40814-023-01271-9.
Late-onset infections (LOI) are a major cause of morbidity and mortality among patients in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Gloving after hand hygiene may be a pragmatic approach to prevent infections that arise when healthcare workers' hands transmit pathogens to neonates.
To determine the feasibility of conducting a multicenter, open-labeled randomized controlled trial (RCT) to determine whether a protocol that requires healthcare workers (HCWs) in a level 3 NICU to wear non-sterile gloves plus hand hygiene reduces the occurrence of a late-onset infection, compared to hand hygiene alone.
In this single-center pilot study, we recruited neonates admitted to the McMaster Children's Hospital NICU from June 2017 to May 2018. The NICU was randomized to begin with the standard (control) arm for 6 months (June 2017 to Dec 2017), followed by the gloving (GloveCare) arm for 6 months (Jan 2018 to July 2018), with a 2-week washout period in-between to educate healthcare workers about gloving. We measured numerous feasibility outcomes including enrollment, event rate, and compliance with hand hygiene (Moment 1: before patient contact, Moment 2: before clean procedure, Moment 3: after body fluid contact, Moment 4: after patient contact) and gloving compliance.
We enrolled 750 neonates (390 Standard care, 360 GloveCare) and achieved 100% enrollment. We found higher hand hygiene compliance during the standard care arm compared to the GloveCare for all four moments of hand hygiene (Moment 1: 87% vs 79%, OR=1.86 (1.34, 2.59); Moment 2: OR=1.73 (1.00, 3.01); Moment 3: OR=1.11 (0.62, 1.98); Moment 4: OR=1.65 (1.27, 2.14)). We developed and validated a method to calculate glove compliance, which ranged from 48 to 85%, and was highest for moment 3 (doffing after a procedure or body fluid exposure risk). No adverse events were documented for patients or staff.
Reduction in hand hygiene compliance in the GloveCare arm presents a pragmatic challenge in ascertaining the effectiveness of gloving to prevent LOI. Most LOIs were non-sterile-site infections, which is considered a less patient-important or clinically relevant outcome compared to sterile-site LOI. Ensuring efficient collection and validation of hand hygiene and gloving data is imperative.
The pilot study demonstrated the feasibility of this intervention though modifications to improve hand hygiene compliance during GloveCare will be important prior to a multicenter cluster RCT to assess the efficacy of non-sterile glove-based care in preventing LOI in the NICU.
Clinicaltrials.gov, NCT03078335.
迟发性感染(LOI)是新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)患者发病和死亡的主要原因。手部卫生后戴手套可能是一种切实可行的方法,可预防医护人员的手将病原体传播给新生儿时引发的感染。
确定开展一项多中心、开放标签随机对照试验(RCT)的可行性,以确定与仅进行手部卫生相比,要求三级NICU的医护人员(HCW)佩戴非无菌手套并进行手部卫生的方案是否能减少迟发性感染的发生。
在这项单中心试点研究中,我们招募了2017年6月至2018年5月入住麦克马斯特儿童医院NICU的新生儿。NICU被随机分为先采用标准(对照)组6个月(2017年6月至2017年12月),然后采用戴手套(手套护理)组6个月(2018年1月至2018年7月),两组之间有2周的洗脱期,以便对医护人员进行戴手套培训。我们测量了许多可行性指标,包括入组情况、事件发生率以及手部卫生(时刻1:接触患者前,时刻2:进行清洁操作前,时刻3:接触体液后,时刻4:接触患者后)和戴手套的依从性。
我们招募了750名新生儿(390名接受标准护理,360名接受手套护理),实现了100%的入组率。我们发现,在手部卫生的所有四个时刻,标准护理组的手部卫生依从性均高于手套护理组(时刻1:87%对79%,OR = 1.86(1.34,2.59);时刻2:OR = 1.73(1.00,3.01);时刻三:OR = 1.11(0.62,1.98);时刻4:OR = 1.65(1.27,2.14))。我们开发并验证了一种计算手套依从性的方法,其范围为48%至85%,在时刻3(操作或有暴露于体液风险后脱手套)时最高。未记录到患者或工作人员的不良事件。
手套护理组手部卫生依从性的降低对确定戴手套预防迟发性感染的有效性提出了实际挑战。大多数迟发性感染是非无菌部位感染,与无菌部位迟发性感染相比,这被认为是对患者不太重要或临床相关性较低的结果。确保高效收集和验证手部卫生和戴手套数据至关重要。
试点研究证明了该干预措施的可行性,但在进行多中心整群随机对照试验以评估基于非无菌手套护理预防NICU迟发性感染的疗效之前,改进手套护理期间手部卫生依从性的措施很重要。
Clinicaltrials.gov,NCT03078335。