Management of infections related to totally implantable venous-access ports: challenges and perspectives
Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
- Lebeaux, David (Author)
- Fernández-Hidalgo, Nuria (Author)
- Chauhan, Ashwini (Author)
- Lee, Samuel (Author)
- Ghigo, Jean-Marc (Author)
- Almirante, Benito (Author)
- Beloin, Christophe (Author)
Title
Management of infections related to totally implantable venous-access ports: challenges and perspectives
Abstract
Use of totally implantable venous-access ports (TIVAPs) is standard practice for patients with diseases such as solid-tumour cancers, haematological malignancies, and chronic digestive diseases. Use of TIVAPs allows long-term administration of venotoxic compounds, improves patients' quality of life, and reduces the risk of infection. Microbial contamination, formation of pathogenic biofilms, and infection, however, are associated with morbidity, mortality, and increased health-care costs. Local and systemic complications or infections related to specific pathogens might lead to device removal. Alternatively, conservative treatment with combined systemic antibiotics and antibiotic lock therapy might be useful. We discuss in-vitro and in-vivo basic and clinical research findings on the epidemiology, diagnosis, and prevention of TIVAP-related infections, the current challenges to management, promising strategies, and some treatments in development that are likely to improve outcomes of TIVAP-related infections, with a particular focus on antibiotic lock therapy.
Publication
The Lancet Infectious Diseases
Date
February 2014
Volume
14
Issue
2
Pages
146 - 159
Accessed
12/15/18, 2:31 PM
Short Title
Management of infections related to totally implantable venous-access ports
Library Catalog
HAL Archives Ouvertes
Citation
Lebeaux, D., Fernández-Hidalgo, N., Chauhan, A., Lee, S., Ghigo, J.-M., Almirante, B., & Beloin, C. (2014). Management of infections related to totally implantable venous-access ports: challenges and perspectives. The Lancet Infectious Diseases, 14(2), 146–159. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(13)70266-4
SYNDROMES AND CONDITIONS
Link to this record