To assess the degree of luminal and extraluminal colonization of long-term central venous catheters (CVC), 359 indwelling silicone CVC from 340 consecutive cancer patients were examined. All CVC were cultured by the roll-plate and sonication quantitative culture techniques. Semiquantitative electron microscopy was done on 39 CVC associated with catheter infections and on 26 culture-negative controls. An additional 10 culture-negative CVC obtained after death were also studied by electron microscopy. Ultrastructural colonization and biofilm formation was universal and quantitatively independent of clinical catheter-related infections. Ultrastructural colonization and biofilm formation was predominantly luminal in long-term CVC (> 30 days). Based on a composite definition, the sensitivity of the roll-plate catheter tip culture was 42%-45% compared with 65%-72% for the sonication of the tip. Colonization of indwelling catheters is universal regardless of culture results. For long-term CVC, colonization becomes predominantly luminal and extraluminal quantitative catheter cultures are of limited diagnostic sensitivity.
Adult cancer patients were prospectively studied to determine the relationship between ultrastructural and microbiologic catheter colonization and clinical catheter-related infections. Participants included 38 patients whose central venous catheters were removed because of suspected catheter infection (16 patients) or other noninfectious causes (22 controls). The presence of clinical infection was determined. Catheters were examined by microbiologic methods (sonication and roll-plate culture) and by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Ultrastructural microbial colonization and biofilm formation were universal and occurred as early as one day after catheter insertion. The extent of biofilm formation was unrelated to the clinical status of patient or the catheter microbiological findings. Secondary seeding of catheters was rarely seen. Catheter microbial biofilm formation occurs early, is universal and does not necessarily represent an infectious condition.
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