Title: P1246990943MymVW
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2Nonvalvular Cardiovascular DeviceRelated
Infections
AHA Scientific Statement
From the Committee on Rheumatic Fever,
Endocarditis and Kawasaki Disease, American Heart
Association
- Larry M. Baddour, Michael A. Bettmann, Ann F.
Bolger, Andrew E. Epstein, Patricia Ferrieri,
Michael A. Gerber, Michael H. Gewitz, Alice K.
Jacobs, Matthew E. Levison, Jane W. Newburger,
Thomas J. Pallasch, Walter R. Wilson, Robert S.
Baltimore, Donald A. Falace, Stanford T. Shulman,
Lloyd Y. Tani, Kathryn A. Taubert
Circulation. 20031082015-2031.
3Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
Infections
- AHA scientific statement
- Circulation 20031082015-2031
- First edition
- Encyclopedic
- Excludes intravascular catheters
- Full statement available on the web at
http//circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/108/1
6/2015
4Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
Infections
- Type of Devices Incidence of Infection
- IntracardiacPacemakers.. 0.13-19.9D
efibrillators. 0.00-3.2LVADs
. 25-70Total artificial hearts
(TAH). To be determinedVentriculoatrial
shunts.. 2.4-9.4Pledgets.
RarePatent ductus arteriosus (PDA) occlusion
devices. RareAtrial septal defect
(ASD) and ventricular septal defect (VSD)
closure devices. RareConduits. R
arePatches Rare -
Circulation 20031082015-2031
5Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
Infections
- Type of Devices Incidence of Infection
- Intra-arterialPeripheral vascular
stents RareVascular grafts, including
hemodialysis.. 1.0-6Intra-aortic
balloon pumps hy-related bacteremias. 1Coronary artery stents RarePatches
1.8 - IntravenousVena caval filters.. Rare
- Closure device use
Circulation 20031082015-2031
6Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
InfectionsAHA Scientific Statement
Two broad sections
- -- General principles
- Clinical manifestations
- Microbiology
- Pathogenesis
- Diagnosis
- Treatment
- Prevention
- -- Specific devices
- Intracardiac
- Intra-arterial
- Intravenous
Circulation 20031082015-2031
7Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
InfectionsPathogenesis
- Pathogen virulence factors
- Adhesions (MSCRAMM)
- Biofilm
- Host response to the artificial device
- Abnormal flow
- Immunologic effects
- Physical/chemical device characteristics
- Platelet, fibrinogen attachment
Circulation 20031082015-2031
8Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
InfectionsClinical Manifestations
- Depend on location of infected portion of device
- Local
- Systemic
Circulation 20031082015-2031
9Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
InfectionsMicrobiology
- Staphylococcal species predominate
- Multidrug resistance, including oxacillin -
frequent - Aerobic gram-negative bacilli
- Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Serratia species
- Fungi
- Candida species - most common among fungi
- Aspergillus species - reported
Circulation 20031082015-2031
10Vascular graft site infection in a hemodialysis
patient due to methicillin-resistant S aureus.
The patient suffered bacteremia in addition to
focal skin and soft tissue changes at the graft
site, including erythema, swelling, warmth, and
pain.
Circulation 20031082015-2031
11Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
InfectionsDiagnosis
- Laboratory
- Specimen (blood, drainage, device) cultures
- Radiologic
- Echocardiographic
Circulation 20031082015-2031
12Transesophageal echocardiographic view of the
left atrium (LA) and right atrium (RA). A
pacemaker lead (filled arrow) is seen as it
crosses the tricuspid valve. The lead is
thickened by infective material, and there is a
round mobile vegetation (open arrow) attached to
its right atrial portion.
Circulation 20031082015-2031
13Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
Infections
- Manifestation of Infection Initial Imaging
Modality - Endocarditis TEEPacemakers (temporary and
permanent)DefibrillatorsLVADsVentriculoatrial
shuntsPledgetsASD closure devicesPatches - Conduits PDA occlusion devices
- Pericarditis TTE or TEECoronary artery
stentsPledgets
TTE or TEE
Circulation 20031082015-2031
14Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
Infections
- Manifestation of Infection Initial Imaging
Modality - Endocarditis TEEPacemakers (temporary and
permanent)DefibrillatorsLVADsVentriculoatrial
shuntsPledgetsASD closure devicesPatches - Conduits PDA occlusion devices
- Pericarditis TTE or TEECoronary artery
stentsPledgets
TTE or TEE
Circulation 20031082015-2031
15Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
Infections
- Manifestation of Infection Initial Imaging
Modality - Perivasculitis CT or MRIPeripheral vascular
stentsVascular grafts, including
hemodialysisAngioplasty/angiography-related
bacteremiasCoronary artery stentsPatches - Aneurysm or pseudoaneurysm AngiographyPledgetsC
oronary artery stentsPatchesAngioplasty/angiogra
phy-related bacteremiasVascular grafts,
including hemodialysis
Circulation 20031082015-2031
16Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
Infections
- Manifestation of Infection Initial Imaging
Modality - Infected thrombosis UltrasoundVena caval
filterVascular grafts, including hemodialysis - Pocket site infections UltrasoundPacemakers
(permanent)DefibrillatorsLVADsTotal artificial
hearts
Circulation 20031082015-2031
17Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
Infections Treatment
- Antimicrobial
- Acute (induction)
- Long-term (lifelong) suppressive
- Device replacement impregnation
- Device removal
- Percutaneous
- Surgical
Circulation 20031082015-2031
18Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
InfectionsTreatment
- Acute (induction)
- Bactericidal/fungicidal
- Parenteral
- Selection
- Based on pathogen identification/susceptibility
testing - Host factors
- Duration
- Variable depending on type of device and location
of infection
Circulation 20031082015-2031
19Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
Infections Treatment
- Long-term (lifelong) suppressive therapy
- Infected device removal - not an option
- Response to acute treatment - clinically and
microbiologically - Cardiovascular status - stable
Circulation 20031082015-2031
20Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
Infections
- Primary prophylaxis
- Modeled after surgical site infection
prophylaxis. - Because of the low incidence of infection for
many of the devices, without evidence-based data. - Routinely used electrophysiological cardiac
devices, VAD, TAH, VA shunts, pledgets, vascular
grafts, and arterial patches.
Circulation 20031082015-2031
21Nonvalvular Cardiovascular Device-Related
Infections
- Secondary prophylaxis
- Antibiotic prophylaxis is not recommended for
patients who undergo dental, respiratory,
gastrointestinal or genitourinary procedures. - It is recommended for patients if they undergo
incision and drainage of infection at other sites
(eg, abscess) or replacement of an infected
device. - It is recommended for patients with residual leak
after device placement for attempted closure of
the leak associated with PDA, ASD, or VSD
Circulation 20031082015-2031
22Electrophysiologic Devices
- Pacemakers
- Incidence of infection, 0.13-19.9
- Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs)
- Incidence of infection, 0-0.8
Circulation 20031082015-2031
23Electrophysiologic Devices
- Generator pocket - most common infection site
- Lead infection
- Pacemaker endocarditis
- 10 of pacemaker infections
- Most often due to generator pocket infection
Circulation 20031082015-2031
24Electrophysiologic Devices
- Infection sources
- Generator pocket contamination at implantation
- Cutaneous erosion of generator
- Hematogenous seeding (late -
onset infection)
Circulation 20031082015-2031
25Electrophysiologic Devices
- Treatment
- Duration of therapy
- No evidence-based data
- Limited to generator site - 10 days
- Lead infection - 2 to 6 weeks
- Device removal
- Paramount Reduce risk of infection relapse and
mortality - Device replacement
- Timing
- Varied recommendations - at least wait until
bacteremia/fungemia cleared - Some may not require/want device replacement
Circulation 20031082015-2031
26Electrophysiologic Devices
- Lead removal
- Greater difficulty if prolonged implantation time
- Techniques (nonsurgical)
- 81-93 successful
- 0-3.3 complications
- 0-0.8 mortality
- Locking stylet
- Telescoping sheath
- Laser sheath
Circulation 20031082015-2031
27Left Ventricular Assist Devices
- Incidence of infection 13-80
- 85 of infections occur 2 weeks after LVAD
placement - Mean duration of LVAD use 73 days
- Statistical association - postoperative
hemodialysis - Clin Infect Dis 2002341295-1300
Circulation 20031082015-2031
28Left Ventricular Assist Devices
- Three infection syndromes
- Driveline infection (most common)
- LVAD pocket site infection
- LVAD endocarditis (least common)
- Not mutually exclusive
Circulation 20031082015-2031
29Left Ventricular Assist Devices
- Immunologic effects
- Aberrant state of CD4
- T-cell activation - apoptosis
- Cutaneous anergy - recall antigens
- Lower T-cell proliferative responses
- Higher surface expression of CD95
- B-cell hyperactivity and dysregulated
immunoglobulin synthesis
Circulation 20031082015-2031
30Left Ventricular Assist Devices
- Persistent bacteremia/fungemia not a
contraindication to cardiac transplantation - Transplantation is life-saving for some patients
with uncontrollable LVAD infection
Circulation 20031082015-2031
31Total Artificial Heart
- 1980s - Jarvik-7
- Infectious/noninfectious complications
- January 2001 - FDA (USA) approval - Abiomed
- Totally implantable except external battery and
lead to electrical inductor coil - 10 patients (3/10/03)
- Blood clotting problems, CVAs
- No infectious complications, 7 patients
- No data, 3 patients
Circulation 20031082015-2031
32Ventriculoatrial (VA) Shunts
- VP VA use
- Incidence of infection
- Large majority within six months of placement
- CONS S. aureus
- Clinical manifestations
- Infection site dependent, virulence of organism,
/- shunt malfunction - Varied, though meningitis unusual
- Remember immunologic sequelae
-
Circulation 20031082015-2031
33Ventriculoatrial (VA) Shunts
- Diagnosis of infection
- Findings
- Presence of fever and 10 PMNs in ventricular
fluid - Treatment
- Two-staged exchange
Circulation 20031082015-2031
34Cardiac Suture Line Pledgets
- Teflon pledgets commonly used
- Three infection syndromes
- Chest wall or epigastric involvement
- Draining sinuses, sub-q masses, pain
- Bronchopulmonary infection
- Recurrent hemoptysis, bronchiectasis, pneumonia
with empyema - Endocardial infection
- Bacteremia or fungemia
Circulation 20031082015-2031
35Occlusion Devices
- Patent ductus arteriosus, atrial septal defect,
and ventricular septal defect - Extremely rare infections (n2)
- Left atrial appendage occluders
- Pending more extensive evaluation
-
Circulation 20031082015-2031
36Prosthetic Vascular Grafts
- Incidence of infection 1-6 ( 5 yrs)
- Location - related
- Aortic
- Aortofemoral 1.5-2
- Infrainguinal
- Intraoperative or perioperative contamination
- Majority of cases
- Incubation period -
- Longer for indolent (CONS) pathogens
-
Circulation 20031082015-2031
37Prosthetic Vascular Grafts
- Purported risk factors
- Groin incisions
- Emergent surgery
- Invasive intervention (local)
- Before/after placement
- Contiguous infection
- Medical conditions (diabetes mellitus, obesity,
chronic renal disease, immunocompromised host)
Circulation 20031082015-2031
38Prosthetic Vascular Grafts
- Clinical presentations
- Distal (extremity) infections
- Focal inflammatory changes
- Intracavitary infections
- Nonspecific, difficult to diagnose
- Magnified if years after placement
- GI bleed
Circulation 20031082015-2031
39Prosthetic Vascular Grafts
- Diagnostic modalities
- Blood cultures
- Radiologic/nuclear medicine
- CT scanning
Sensitivity/specificity - 94/95 - MRI
- Sensitivity/specificity - 85/100
- Indium WBC, gallium - lower specificity
Circulation 20031082015-2031
40Prosthetic Vascular Grafts
- Management
- 4 tenets
- Excision of graft (foreign body)
- Wide/complete debridement of devitalized,
infected tissue - Maintain or establish vascular flow
- Institute prolonged systemic antimicrobial
therapy
Circulation 20031082015-2031
41Hemodialysis Prosthetic Vascular
Grafts
- Epidemiologic factors
- Immunocompromised state
- Repetitive needle puncture at graft site
- Increased carriage of S. aureus
- 3.2 infections/100 patient-months
- CDC national surveillance system
- AV fistulas - 0.56
- Synthetic AV grafts - 1.36
- Cuffed catheters - 8.42
- Non-cuffed catheters - 11.98
-
Circulation 20031082015-2031
42Hemodialysis Prosthetic Vascular
Grafts
- Microbiology
- Access-related bacteremia (fistulas or grafts)
- S. aureus - 53
- CONS - 20.3
- MDR commonplace
- MRSA (VISA, VRSA)
- MRSE
- VRE
Circulation 20031082015-2031
43Hemodialysis Prosthetic Vascular
Grafts
- Management
- Complex issues, including available vascular
access - Old, nonfunctioning AV grafts
- Cause of delayed sepsis
- Prevention
- Mupirocin
- Increased AV fistula use
- Cryopreserved human femoral vein allograft
- Vaccines
Circulation 20031082015-2031
44Endovascular Stents and Stent-Grafts
- 400,000 patients in US undergo stent placement
annually - Incidence of infection
- Early (
- Predominant pathogen
- S. aureus
Circulation 20031082015-2031
45Endovascular Stents and Stent-Grafts
- Complications
- Pseudoaneurysms
- Others (abscess formation, arterial necrosis,
septic emboli, refractory sepsis, amputation
requirement, death) - Treatment
- Excision with extra-anatomic revascularization
- Prevention
- Primary prophylaxis - selected patients
Circulation 20031082015-2031
46Intra-aortic Balloon Counterpulsation Catheters
(IABP)
- Incidence of infection
- Wound infection
- Bacteremia
- Purported risks
- Obesity
- Emergent placement
- Surgical insertion
- Longer duration of use
- Done in areas outside OR or cath lab
- Larger diameter catheters (used in past)
Circulation 20031082015-2031
47Coronary Angiography and PTCA
- 900,000 annually worldwide
- Stents used in 80-85
- Incidence of infection
- Multiple infectious complications are described
- Bacteremia
- Mycotic aneurysm, septic arthritis, endarteritis
Circulation 20031082015-2031
48Coronary Angiography and PTCA
- Risk factors
- Brachial artery access
- Cutdown approach
- Repeat puncture (ipsilateral)
- Prolonged indwelling FA sheath
- Pressurized heparin solution
- Older age
- CHF
Circulation 20031082015-2031
49Coronary Angiography and PTCA
- Microbiology
- Staphylococcus species - Most common
- Diagnosis
- CT scan or angiography
- Persistent sepsis, septic emboli, and abdominal
flank pain - Treatment
- Aneurysms require resection or ligation
- Rupture propensity
Circulation 20031082015-2031
50Coronary Artery Stents
- Infection extremely rare
- Only 5 cases described in English literature
- Acute infection
- Pathogens
- S. aureus - 3 P. aeruginosa - 2
- 3/5 patients died
Circulation 20031082015-2031
51Vascular Closure Devices (VCD)
- FDA (USA) approval - 5 devices
- Favored over manual compression or compression
devices - Decrease time to hemostasis, increased patient
comfort - Incidence of infection
- Two concerns
- VCD manual compression
- Infections more severe, more difficult to treat
(often surgical intervention)
Circulation 20031082015-2031
52Vascular Closure Devices (VCD)
- Microbiology
- S. aureus
- Methicillin-resistant
- Risk
- Diabetes mellitus?
- Prophylaxis for this group and for vascular
access per prosthetic graft
Circulation 20031082015-2031
53Dacron Carotid Patches
- Incidence of infection 0.33 - 1.8
- Local (cervical) findings
- Early (
- Cellulitis, abscess, sepsis, pseudoaneurysm,
massive hemorrhage, patch dehiscence - Late
- Sinus tracts with drainage, pseudoaneurysm
Circulation 20031082015-2031
54Dacron Carotid Patches
- Microbiology
- Both viridans group streptococci and S.aureus
predominate early late infections -
coagulase-negative staphylococci - Treatment
- Surgical
- Usually patch removal
- Outcome
- Overall good
Circulation 20031082015-2031
55Vena Caval Filters
- 30 years in use, 10 filters available (USA)
- Infection extremely rare
- 3 proven, 2 suspect
- Staphylococcal species - all 5 cases
- 4 with bacteremia, 2 with spondylodiscitis
- 3 cures with device removal
- 1 sepsis death, 1 long-term suppressive therapy
-
Circulation 20031082015-2031
56Conclusions
- Medical devices enhance ability to care for
patients with CVD - Device infections complicate patient care
- Cure of infection may be difficult to achieve
without device removal - Future developments should be directed toward
- -- devices more resistant to infection
- -- antimicrobial agents with enhanced activity
- in clearing infection
- -- staphylococcal vaccines
-
Circulation 20031082015-2031
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