Sustainable neonatal CLABSI surveillance: consensus towards new criteria in the Netherlands

Publication date

2021-02-05

Authors

the Working Group on Neonatal Infectious Diseases of the Section of Neonatology of the Dutch Paediatric Society

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Background: Central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSI) are a main focus of infection prevention and control initiatives in neonatal care. Standardised surveillance of neonatal CLABSI enables intra- and interfacility comparisons which can contribute to quality improvement. To date, there is no national registration system for CLABSI in neonatal care in the Netherlands and several criteria are used for local monitoring of CLABSI incidence rates. To achieve standardised CLABSI surveillance we conducted a consensus procedure with regard to nationwide neonatal CLABSI surveillance criteria (SC). Methods: A modified Delphi consensus procedure for the development of nationwide neonatal CLABSI SC was performed between January 2016 and January 2017 in the Netherlands. An expert panel was formed by members of the Working Group on Neonatal Infectious Diseases of the Section of Neonatology of the Dutch Paediatric Society. The consensus procedure consisted of three expert panel rounds. Results: The expert panel achieved consensus on Dutch neonatal CLABSI SC. Neonatal CLABSI is defined as a bloodstream infection occurring more than 72 h after birth, associated with an indwelling central venous or arterial line and laboratory confirmed by one or more blood cultures. In addition, the blood culture finding should not be related to an infection at another site and one of the following criteria can be applied: 1. a bacterial or fungal pathogen is identified from one or more blood cultures; 2. the patient has clinical symptoms of sepsis and 2A) a common commensal is identified in two separate blood cultures or 2B) a common commensal is identified by one blood culture and C-reactive protein level is above 10 mg/L in the first 36 h following blood culture collection. Conclusions: The newly developed Dutch neonatal CLABSI SC are concise, specified to the neonatal population and comply with a single blood culture policy in actual neonatal clinical practice. International agreement upon neonatal CLABSI SC is needed to identify best practices for infection prevention and control.

Keywords

Catheter-related infections, Central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSI), Cross infection, Epidemiological monitoring, Hospital-acquired infections (HAI), Infection control, Neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), Newborn, Quality improvement, Surveillance, Humans, Catheter-Related Infections/diagnosis, Infection Control, Catheterization, Central Venous, Sepsis/diagnosis, Consensus, Netherlands, Delphi Technique, Infant, Newborn, Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health, Microbiology (medical), Infectious Diseases, Pharmacology (medical), Journal Article

Citation

the Working Group on Neonatal Infectious Diseases of the Section of Neonatology of the Dutch Paediatric Society 2021, 'Sustainable neonatal CLABSI surveillance : consensus towards new criteria in the Netherlands', Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control, vol. 10, no. 1, 31, pp. 31. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13756-021-00900-3