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Published in: Pediatric Surgery International 2/2009

01-02-2009 | Original Article

Bloodstream infections in pediatric ECLS: usefulness of daily blood culture monitoring and predictive value of biological markers. The British Columbia experience

Authors: Gregor W. Kaczala, Stephane C. Paulus, Nawaf Al-Dajani, Wilson Jang, Edith Blondel-Hill, Simon Dobson, Arthur Cogswell, Avash J. Singh

Published in: Pediatric Surgery International | Issue 2/2009

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Abstract

Introduction

The incidence of bloodstream infection (BSI) in extracorporeal life support (ECLS) is reported between 0.9 and 19.5%. In January 2006, the Extracorporeal Life Support Organization (ELSO) reported an overall incidence of 8.78% distributed as follows: respiratory: 6.5% (neonatal), 20.8% (pediatric); cardiac: 8.2% (neonatal) and 12.6% (pediatric).

Method

At BC Children’s Hospital (BCCH) daily surveillance blood cultures (BC) are performed and antibiotic prophylaxis is not routinely recommended. Positive BC (BC+) were reviewed, including resistance profiles, collection time of BC+, time to positivity and mortality. White blood cell count, absolute neutrophile count, immature/total ratio, platelet count, fibrinogen and lactate were analyzed 48, 24 and 0 h prior to BSI. A univariate linear regression analysis was performed.

Results

From 1999 to 2005, 89 patients underwent ECLS. After exclusion, 84 patients were reviewed. The attack rate was 22.6% (19 BSI) and 13.1% after exclusion of coagulase-negative staphylococci (n = 8). BSI patients were significantly longer on ECLS (157 h) compared to the no-BSI group (127 h, 95% CI: 106–148). Six BSI patients died on ECLS (35%; 4 congenital diaphragmatic hernias, 1 hypoplastic left heart syndrome and 1 after a tetralogy repair). BCCH survival on ECLS was 71 and 58% at discharge, which is comparable to previous reports. No patient died primarily because of BSI. No BSI predictor was identified, although lactate may show a decreasing trend before BSI (P = 0.102).

Conclusion

Compared with ELSO, the studied BSI incidence was higher with a comparable mortality. We speculate that our BSI rate is explained by underreporting of “contaminants” in the literature, the use of broad-spectrum antibiotic prophylaxis and a higher yield with daily monitoring BC. We support daily surveillance blood cultures as an alternative to antibiotic prophylaxis in the management of patients on ECLS.
Literature
1.
go back to reference Extracorporeal Life Support Organization (2006) ECLS Registry Report. Ann Arbor, MI, January Extracorporeal Life Support Organization (2006) ECLS Registry Report. Ann Arbor, MI, January
8.
go back to reference Baltimore RS (1987) Is it real or is it a contaminant? A guide to the interpretation of blood culture results. Am J Dis Child 141:241–242PubMed Baltimore RS (1987) Is it real or is it a contaminant? A guide to the interpretation of blood culture results. Am J Dis Child 141:241–242PubMed
9.
Metadata
Title
Bloodstream infections in pediatric ECLS: usefulness of daily blood culture monitoring and predictive value of biological markers. The British Columbia experience
Authors
Gregor W. Kaczala
Stephane C. Paulus
Nawaf Al-Dajani
Wilson Jang
Edith Blondel-Hill
Simon Dobson
Arthur Cogswell
Avash J. Singh
Publication date
01-02-2009
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Pediatric Surgery International / Issue 2/2009
Print ISSN: 0179-0358
Electronic ISSN: 1437-9813
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00383-008-2299-1

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