1.Summary of the best evidence for preventing peripherally inserted central venous catheter-associated infection
Minshan XU ; Guangming WAN ; Ye CHEN ; Aiying CHEN ; Ziwei KAN ; Benyue JIANG
Chinese Journal of Infection Control 2025;24(9):1269-1277
Objective To systematically summarize the best evidence for the prevention of peripherally inserted central venous catheter(PICC)-associated infection,and provide evidence-based basis for healthcare workers to for-mulate management strategies for the prevention of PICC-associated infection.Methods According to the"6S"model of the evidence pyramid,relevant literatures on the prevention of PICC-related infection were systematically retrieved from top to bottom from UpToDate,websites of World Health Organization,Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,Infusion Nurses Society,Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario,New South Wales Agency for Clinical Innovation,National Health Commission of the People'Republic of China,Medlive,PubMed,Web of Sci-ence,Cochrane Library,Embase,China National Knowledge Infrastructure(CNKI),Wanfang,VIP,and SinoMed Database.The types of included literatures were clinical decision-making,guidelines,consensus,evidence summa-ries,and systematic reviews.The retrieval search window was from the establishment of the database to August 2024.Two researchers independently evaluated the quality of literatures and extracted evidence.Results A total of 19 papers were included in the analysis,including 2 clinical decisions,9 guidelines,6 expert consensuses,1 evi-dence summary,and 1 systematic review.Ultimately,28 pieces of evidence covering 6 topics including manage-ment,tools,catheterization,maintenance,infusion,and removal were formed.Conclusion This study summarizes the best evidence for preventing PICC-related infection,and recommends that clinical healthcare workers apply rele-vant evidence rationally and prudently,so as to reduce the incidence of PICC-related infections.
2.Summary of the best evidence for preventing peripherally inserted central venous catheter-associated infection
Minshan XU ; Guangming WAN ; Ye CHEN ; Aiying CHEN ; Ziwei KAN ; Benyue JIANG
Chinese Journal of Infection Control 2025;24(9):1269-1277
Objective To systematically summarize the best evidence for the prevention of peripherally inserted central venous catheter(PICC)-associated infection,and provide evidence-based basis for healthcare workers to for-mulate management strategies for the prevention of PICC-associated infection.Methods According to the"6S"model of the evidence pyramid,relevant literatures on the prevention of PICC-related infection were systematically retrieved from top to bottom from UpToDate,websites of World Health Organization,Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,Infusion Nurses Society,Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario,New South Wales Agency for Clinical Innovation,National Health Commission of the People'Republic of China,Medlive,PubMed,Web of Sci-ence,Cochrane Library,Embase,China National Knowledge Infrastructure(CNKI),Wanfang,VIP,and SinoMed Database.The types of included literatures were clinical decision-making,guidelines,consensus,evidence summa-ries,and systematic reviews.The retrieval search window was from the establishment of the database to August 2024.Two researchers independently evaluated the quality of literatures and extracted evidence.Results A total of 19 papers were included in the analysis,including 2 clinical decisions,9 guidelines,6 expert consensuses,1 evi-dence summary,and 1 systematic review.Ultimately,28 pieces of evidence covering 6 topics including manage-ment,tools,catheterization,maintenance,infusion,and removal were formed.Conclusion This study summarizes the best evidence for preventing PICC-related infection,and recommends that clinical healthcare workers apply rele-vant evidence rationally and prudently,so as to reduce the incidence of PICC-related infections.

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