Single‐Use Versus Multiple‐Use Endotracheal Suction Catheters in Mechanically Ventilated Patients: A Feasibility Randomised Controlled Trial
Mohamed H. Eid, Kevin Hambridge, Patricia Schofield, Jos M. Latour

TL;DR
This study tests if using single-use suction catheters or chlorhexidine flushing can reduce pneumonia in ventilated patients in resource-limited hospitals.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the feasibility of implementing single-use catheters and chlorhexidine flushing in low-resource ICUs to potentially reduce ventilator-associated pneumonia.
Findings
High recruitment and retention rates were achieved across all groups.
Chlorhexidine flushing and single-use catheters were successfully implemented without adverse events.
VAP incidence was lower in intervention groups compared to standard care, though not statistically significant.
Abstract
In resource‐limited settings, single‐use open endotracheal suction catheters are commonly used multiple times. The current evidence of this practice on ventilator‐associated pneumonia (VAP) among mechanically ventilated patients remains unclear. The aim of this study was to test the feasibility of single‐use and multiple‐use endotracheal suction catheters flushed with chlorhexidine versus standard care (multiple‐use endotracheal suction catheters flushed with normal saline) to reduce VAP in resource‐limited intensive care units (ICUs) and evaluate study methods for designing a future definitive randomised controlled trial (RCT). A three‐armed feasibility RCT was conducted in three ICUs at a university hospital in Egypt. Sixty mechanically ventilated patients were randomized into three groups: Intervention I group, single‐use catheters, Intervention II group, multiple‐use catheters…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNosocomial Infections in ICU · Antibiotic Use and Resistance · Infection Control in Healthcare
