Loading...
Incorporating antibiotics or heparin into central venous catheters reduces central line bloodstream infections in adults. To determine if similar devices are effective in children, U.K. investigators conducted a randomized controlled trial (CATCH) involving 1485 children at 14 pediatric intensive care units who were expected to need a central venous catheter for at least 3 days.
Patients were randomized to receive one of three types of catheters — a standard catheter, a catheter impregnated with heparin, or a catheter impregnated with minocycline and rifampicin antibiotics — and were followed from 48 hours after randomization until 48 hours after catheter removal or death.
The time to first bloodstream infection (the primary outcome) was simi…