Kidney International Reports (Mar 2017)

Hemodialysis Infection Prevention Protocols Ontario—Shower Technique (HIPPO-ST): A Pilot Randomized Trial

  • S. Daisy Kosa,
  • Amiram Gafni,
  • Andrew A. House,
  • JulieAnn Lawrence,
  • Louise Moist,
  • Bharat Nathoo,
  • Paul Tam,
  • Alicia Sarabia,
  • Lehana Thabane,
  • George Wu,
  • Charmaine E. Lok

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ekir.2016.11.001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 2
pp. 228 – 238

Abstract

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We developed the Hemodialysis Infection Prevention Protocols Ontario—Shower Technique (HIPPO-ST) to permit hemodialysis (HD) patients with central venous catheters (catheters) to shower without additional infection risk. Our primary objective was to determine the feasibility of conducting a parallel randomized controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate the impact of HIPPO-ST on catheter-related bacteremia (CRB) in adult HD patients. Methods: Adult HD patients using catheters were recruited from 11 HD units. Patients were randomized to receive HIPPO-ST or standard care and were followed up for 6 months. Only CRB-outcome assessors were blinded. For the study to be considered feasible, 4 of 5 feasibility outcomes, each with its own statistical threshold for success, must have been achieved. Results: A total of 68 patients were randomized (33 HIPPO-ST and 35 control) and were followed up to 6 months. Of 5 measures of feasibility, 4 were achieved: (1) accurate CRB rate documented (threshold: κ level >0.80); (2) 97.8% (279/285) of satellite HD patients with catheters were screened (threshold: >95%); (3) 88% (23/26) in the HIPPO-ST arm were successfully educated by 6 months (threshold: >80%); and (4) 0% (0/29) patients in the control arm were “contaminated,” that is, using HIPPO-ST (threshold: 80%). The rate of CRB was similarly low in HIPPO-ST and control groups (0.68 vs. 0.88/1000 catheter days). Discussion: This HIPPO-ST pilot study demonstrated the feasibility of the larger HIPPO-ST study, especially given the high levels of education success with the HIPPO-ST arm and the low levels of contamination in the control arm.

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