Chlorhexidine versus saline in reducing the risk of catheter associated urinary tract infection: A cost-effectiveness analysis
Date
2019
Authors
Mitchell, Brett G.
Fasugba, Oyebola
Cheng, Allen
Gregory, Victoria
Koerner, Jane
Collignon, Peter
Gardner, Anne
Graves, Nicholas
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Pergamon Press Ltd.
Abstract
Background: Catheter associated urinary tract infections are one of the most common infections acquired
in hospital. A recent randomised control study demonstrated the benefit of using chlorhexidine (0.1%) for
meatal cleaning prior to urinary catheter insertion, by reducing both catheter associated asymptomatic
bacteriuria and infection. These findings raise the important question of whether a decision to switch
from saline to chlorhexidine was likely to be cost-effective. The aim of this paper was to evaluate the costeffectiveness
of adopting routine use of chlorhexidine for meatal cleaning prior to urinary catheter
insertion
Methods: The outcomes of this cost-effectiveness study are changes to health service costs in $AUD and
changes to quality adjusted life years from a decision to adopt 0.1% chlorhexidine for meatal cleaning
prior to urinary catheter insertion as compared to saline. Effectiveness outcomes for this study were
taken from a 32 week stepped wedge randomised controlled study conducted in three Australian
hospitals.
Results: The changes in health costs from switching from saline to 0.1% chlorhexidine per 100,000
catheterisations would save hospitals AUD$387,909 per 100,000 catherisations, prevent 70 cases of
catheter associated urinary tract infections, release 282 bed days and provide a small improvement in
health benefits of 1.43 quality adjusted life years. Using a maximum willingness to pay for a marginal
quality adjusted life year threshold of AUD$28,000 per 100,000 catherisations, suggests that adopting
chlorhexidine would be cost effective and potentially cost-saving.
Conclusion: The findings from our work provide evidence to health system administrators and those
responsible for drafting catheter associated urinary tract infections prevention guidelines that investing
in switching from saline to chlorhexidine is not only clinically effective but also a sensible decision in the
context of allocating finite healthcare resources.
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Keywords
Chlorhexidine, Cost-benefit analysis, Costs and cost analysis, Health services, Nursing, Urinary catheters, Urinary tract infections, Infection control
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Source
International Journal of Nursing Studies
Type
Journal article
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Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License
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