Algorithm for diagnosis and management of line sepsis with long-term intravenous devices (IVDs).
* Per 1000 days a central line was used. |
• Examine the patient thoroughly to identify unrelated sources of infection. |
• Carefully examine all catheter insertion sites; gram stain and culture any expressible purulence. |
• Obtain two 10-15 mL cultures: |
• If standard (nonquantitative) blood cultures, draw one by percutaneous peripheral venipuncture and one through the suspect IVD. |
If quantitative blood culture techniques are available (e.g., the Isolator® system), catheter-drawn cultures can enhance the diagnostic specificity of blood culturing in diagnosis of line sepsis. However, a peripheral percutaneous quantitative blood culture must be drawn concomitantly. |
• Option regarding a peripheral IV or arterial catheter: remove and culture catheter. |
• Options regarding a short-term central venous catheter: |
•Purulence at insertion site |
or |
No purulence, but patient floridly septic, without obvious source: |
Remove and culture catheter. |
Gram stain purulence. |
Re-establish access at new site. |
•No purulence, patient not floridly septic: |
• Leave catheter in place, pending results of blood cultures. |
or |
•Remove and culture catheter, re-establish needed access at new site. |
• Options regarding surgically-implanted, cuffed Hickman-type catheters. |
•Remove at outset if: |
• Infecting organism known to be S. aureus, Bacillus spp., JK Diptheroid, Mycobacterium species or filamentous fungus. |
• Refractory or progressive exit site infection, despite antimicrobial therapy, especially with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. |
• Tunnel infected. |
• Evidence of septic thrombosis of cannulated central vein or septic pulmonary emboli. |
• Evidence of endocarditis. |
•Remove later on if: |
• Any of the above become manifest. |
• BSI persists ≥ 3 days, despite IV antimicrobial therapy through catheter. |
• Options regarding surgically implanted subcutaneous ports (e.g., Portacath): |
• Cellulitis without documented bacteremia: begin antimicrobial therapy, withhold removing port. |
• Aspirate from port shows organisms on gram-stain or heavy growth in quantitative culture, or documented port-related bacteremia: remove port. |
• Decision on whether to begin antimicrobial therapy, before culture results available, based on clinical assessment and/or gram stain of exit site or the blood drawn from a long-term IVD. |
• With no microbiologic data to guide antimicrobial selection in a septic patient with suspected line sepsis, consider: IV vancomycin and ciprofloxacin, cefepime, or imipenem. |
* Per 1000 days a central line was used. |
• Examine the patient thoroughly to identify unrelated sources of infection. |
• Carefully examine all catheter insertion sites; gram stain and culture any expressible purulence. |
• Obtain two 10-15 mL cultures: |
• If standard (nonquantitative) blood cultures, draw one by percutaneous peripheral venipuncture and one through the suspect IVD. |
If quantitative blood culture techniques are available (e.g., the Isolator® system), catheter-drawn cultures can enhance the diagnostic specificity of blood culturing in diagnosis of line sepsis. However, a peripheral percutaneous quantitative blood culture must be drawn concomitantly. |
• Option regarding a peripheral IV or arterial catheter: remove and culture catheter. |
• Options regarding a short-term central venous catheter: |
•Purulence at insertion site |
or |
No purulence, but patient floridly septic, without obvious source: |
Remove and culture catheter. |
Gram stain purulence. |
Re-establish access at new site. |
•No purulence, patient not floridly septic: |
• Leave catheter in place, pending results of blood cultures. |
or |
•Remove and culture catheter, re-establish needed access at new site. |
• Options regarding surgically-implanted, cuffed Hickman-type catheters. |
•Remove at outset if: |
• Infecting organism known to be S. aureus, Bacillus spp., JK Diptheroid, Mycobacterium species or filamentous fungus. |
• Refractory or progressive exit site infection, despite antimicrobial therapy, especially with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. |
• Tunnel infected. |
• Evidence of septic thrombosis of cannulated central vein or septic pulmonary emboli. |
• Evidence of endocarditis. |
•Remove later on if: |
• Any of the above become manifest. |
• BSI persists ≥ 3 days, despite IV antimicrobial therapy through catheter. |
• Options regarding surgically implanted subcutaneous ports (e.g., Portacath): |
• Cellulitis without documented bacteremia: begin antimicrobial therapy, withhold removing port. |
• Aspirate from port shows organisms on gram-stain or heavy growth in quantitative culture, or documented port-related bacteremia: remove port. |
• Decision on whether to begin antimicrobial therapy, before culture results available, based on clinical assessment and/or gram stain of exit site or the blood drawn from a long-term IVD. |
• With no microbiologic data to guide antimicrobial selection in a septic patient with suspected line sepsis, consider: IV vancomycin and ciprofloxacin, cefepime, or imipenem. |