신장내과 이지연 Peritoneal dialysis-related infection ISPD guidelines 2010 update
Peritoneal dialysis-related infection CAPD Peritonitis Major complication of peritoneal dialysis (PD) contributing factor to death on 16% of death on PD why patients switch from PD to HD
Cause of peritonitis Touch contamination Catheter-related infection Transvisceral migration due to intraabdominal pathology (eg, bowel leak) Hematogenous Vaginal leak- very rare
Exit-site and tunnel infection Definition Purulent drainage from the exit site indicates the presence of infection. Erythema may or may not represent infection Therapy The most serious and common exit-site pathogens :Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa Oral antibiotic therapy is generally recommended, with the exception of methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA)
Equivocal Acute infection chronic infection
Tunnel infection
G(+) organism Slowly resolving or severe S.aureus P.Aeruginosa
Exit-site and tunnel infection Pseudomonas aeruginosa 1 st choice : quinolone sevelamer, calcium, oral iron, zinc preparations, sucralfate, magnesium–aluminum antacids, milk, chelation interactions Quinolone + IP aminoglycoside, ceftazidime, cefepime, piperacillin, imipenem–cilastatin, meropenem
Exit-site and tunnel infection Ultrasonography useful adjunctive tool in the management of exit-site and tunnel infections involvement of the proximal cuff: poor clinical outcome Treatment duration until the exit site appears entirely normal 2weeks is the minimum length of treatment P. aeruginosa : for 3 weeks
Exit-site and tunnel infection Catheter removal Exit-site infection peritonitis (same organism) P.aeruginosa (should be considered earlier) Prolonged peritonitis Relapsing peritonits
Initial presentation and management of peritonitis Abdominal pain — 79 % Fever (greater than 37.5ºC) — 53 % Nausea — 31 % Diarrhea — 7 % Abdominal tenderness — 70 % Rebound tenderness — 50 %
Initial presentation and management of peritonitis Diagnosis cloudy effluent, abdominal pain,fever, N/V,diarrhea Dialysate WBC >100/mL (least 50% PMN) (after a dwell time of at least 4 hours) Gram stain or culture (+) Peritonitis, but WBC< 100/mL (10%) poor host immune response short length of the dwell (ex, APD)
Differential diagnosis of cloudy effluent
Initial presentation and management of peritonitis cloudy effluent heparin(500u/L) to the dialysate to prevent occlusion of the catheter by fibrin empiric antibiotic therapy for PD-associated peritonitis as soon as possible
Specimen processing Culture-negative peritonitis <20% Standard culture technique : use of blood-culture bottles but a large-volume culture (e.g., culturing the sediment after centrifuging 50 mL of effluent) + bedside inoculation of 5-10ml effluent in two blood culture bottle leukocyte esterase, broad-spectrum polymerase chain reaction (PCR), quantitative bacterial DNA PCR
Imaging Abdominal series Abdomen CT Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) Radionuclide scanning D/Dx secondary peritonitis
Empirical antibiotic selection
Vancomycin Intermittent dosing interval : 4-5days modify dose based on serum drug concentration redosing : vancomycin level < 15ug/mL Continuous administration Intermittent administration
Peritonitis in APD patients APD CAPD? unclear not familiar with CAPD technique resetting the cycler – longer exchange time Intermittent administration
Terminology of peritonitis Recurrent An episode that occurs within 4 weeks of completion of therapy of a prior episode but with a different organism Relapsing An episode that occurs within 4 weeks of completion of therapy of a prior episode with the same organism or 1 sterile episode Repeat An episode that occurs more than 4 weeks after completion of therapy of a prior episode with the same organism Refractory Failure of the effluent to clear after 5 days of appropriate antibiotics
Indication for catheter removal