VHF Clinical Care for Safely Performing Acute Hemodialysis in Patients in U.S. Hospitals

Key points

  • Who this is for: Hospital-based dialysis providers.
  • What this is for: Recommendations to help hospital-based dialysis providers safely perform renal replacement therapy (hemodialysis) in patients with viral hemorrhagic fever (VHF).
  • How this relates to other guidance: When necessary for patient care, this information should be used along with Infection Prevention and Control Recommendations for Patients in U.S. Hospitals who are Suspected or Confirmed to have Selected Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers.

Key Points

This guidance refers only to the following viral hemorrhagic fevers: Ebola, Marburg, Lassa, Crimean Congo Hemorrhagic Fever (CCHF) and the South American Hemorrhagic Fevers (i.e., those caused by Junin, Machupo, Chapare, Guanarito and Sabia viruses). Refer to the pathogen-specific pages for further information about the individual pathogens (e.g., signs and symptoms, incubation periods, routes of transmission, diagnosis, treatments).

Recommendations:

  1. Follow Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) guidance.
  2. Healthcare personnel must prevent direct contact or splashes with blood and body fluids, contaminated equipment, and soiled environmental surfaces.
  3. Healthcare personnel should only perform hemodialysis/CRRT in the patient's isolation room.
  4. Limit the number of healthcare personnel who provide patient care and perform procedures.
  5. These guidelines include multiple recommendations about safely selecting and using equipment, disposing of supplies and wastes, and disinfecting equipment. See the appropriate topic heading below for details.

The purpose of this document is to convey information to hospital-based dialysis providers to help them safely perform renal replacement therapy (hemodialysis) in patients confirmed to have selected VHFs. The recommendations and information below are specific for hemodialysis and should be implemented with the precautions described in Infection Prevention and Control Recommendations for Patients in U.S. Hospitals who are Suspected or Confirmed to have Selected Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers.

Treatment decisions should be made by the clinical team caring for the patient. However, infection control considerations may help to inform providers' decisions and should influence hospitals' planning processes.

Inpatient care of patients with VHF should be provided in a hospital with capacity to perform continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT). Efforts to minimize direct blood exposure to healthcare personnel and blood contamination of the environment are of principal importance.

In general, CRRT would be preferred over acute peritoneal dialysis (most commonly performed for acute kidney injury in pediatric patients) because of challenges related to performing peritoneal dialysis catheter insertion in the patient's isolation room and performing exchanges through a peritoneal dialysis catheter that has not completely healed. It should be noted that peritoneal dialysis effluent is likely to be much more infectious than hemodialysis effluent and would need to be handled with extreme care.

Patient Placement

Hemodialysis/CRRT should only be performed in the patient's isolation room.

Establishing Vascular Access for Dialysis

Patients with VHF may have disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), and correction of coagulopathy is not always possible. Read more on pathogen-specific pages.

Designate a highly competent individual, who has also been trained to follow CDC guidelines for proper PPE procedures, to perform catheter insertion.

Perform catheter insertion in the isolation room and use local strategies to minimize blood exposure during dialysis catheter placement.

The subclavian site for catheter insertion should be avoided because of the challenges with direct site compression if bleeding occurs. Selection of the internal jugular versus femoral vein for catheter insertion may depend on patient characteristics and operator proficiency. Using a chest X-ray to confirm line placement will require availability of portable X-ray equipment within the isolation room. This and other factors should be considered in the planning stage before it becomes necessary.

Ultrasound guidance should be used, by an individual fully trained in this technique, to reduce cannulation attempts and mechanical complications, including arterial puncture. If used, the ultrasound machine should be dedicated to the isolation room until it can be terminally cleaned and disinfected. Read more on Guidelines for the Prevention of Intravascular Catheter-Related Infections, 2011 [PDF – 83 pages].

Attach closed, needleless connector devices to the catheter hubs to reduce blood exposure during catheter connections and disconnections. Other measures to reduce blood exposure during disconnections could include implementing the use of clamps and/or caps on the ends of blood lines after disconnection and decreasing distance to waste bins when discarding the extracorporeal circuit.

If possible, limit the number and different types of healthcare personnel involved in hemodialysis/CRRT procedures. For example, ICU nurses performing CRRT could eliminate need for dialysis unit nursing staff to also care for the patient.

All staff involved in providing dialysis should follow recommendations for appropriate PPE.

Staff should wear a fluid-resistant or impermeable apron if they will be performing any circuit connection/disconnection procedures, handling used dialyzers or tubing, or handling or draining effluent.

A hemodialysis/CRRT machine should be dedicated for use on the patient and kept in the isolation room until terminal disinfection procedures are undertaken.

All other dialysis-related supplies, including the dialyzer, should be disposed of after use in accordance with local, state, and federal regulations. Read more on VHF-Associated Waste Management.

Under no circumstances should a used dialyzer be reprocessed or reused.

The viruses included in this guidance should not be able to cross an intact dialyzer membrane. Because a small dialyzer leak might not be apparent; however, dialysis effluent should always be handled with care, and while wearing appropriate PPE, to avoid contact and splashes.

The effluent should be disposed of in the toilet or other dedicated drain in a manner that prevents splashes and allows safe drainage into the wastewater sewer system.

Use a dialysis machine that is familiar to the staff who will perform dialysis.

Machines for CRRT

Certain CRRT machines have features that make them easier to manage and to decontaminate in the context of caring for a patient with VHF than traditional hemodialysis machines, such as a completely closed system, lack of an internal pathway, and use of disposable dialysate and saline supplies. The possibility of blood contamination of internal machine components through pressure monitors is also much less likely with these machines than with other hemodialysis machines. During CRRT, staff should pay close attention to pressure alarms and failures of pressure monitors and look for and document any failure of the tubing or spillage of fluid outside of the tubing, as these may have implications for more extensive machine disinfection procedures.

Additional considerations:

  • If clinically appropriate, consider regional citrate anticoagulation during CRRT to reduce episodes of filter clotting that require manipulation of the dialyzer and/or circuit. Regional citrate anticoagulation for CRRT should be used only if the hospital has a protocol in place and nurses trained in the protocol.
  • Consider using the same CRRT machine for hemodialysis of the patient for as long as possible while renal replacement therapy is needed (e.g., including for sustained low-efficiency dialysis, or prolonged intermittent renal replacement therapy) to avoid introducing a second dialysis machine.

Machines for intermittent hemodialysis

If use of an intermittent hemodialysis machine is warranted:

  • Use disposable accessory supplies, such as priming bucket and concentrate containers, if possible.
    • Establish steps for handling accessory supplies that are not disposable, must be dedicated to the patient, and disinfected between uses.
    • If an attached computer keyboard is needed, use a flat solid surface keyboard that can be easily disinfected or a keyboard cover that can be disinfected or disposed of.
  • Pay close attention to pressure alarms, failures of the pressure monitor, and look for and document any flow of blood in the line approaching the external transducer protector, as these may signal internal contamination of the machine with blood.

External machine surfaces

Cleaning and disinfection of external machine surfaces should be performed in accordance with CDC guidance and manufacturer's instructions.

General principles include the following:

  • Use appropriate PPE.
  • Perform a cleaning step using a detergent.
  • Perform disinfection using an EPA-registered hospital disinfectant from List Q; for Ebola, products from List L can also be used.
  • Ensure all surfaces are cleaned and disinfected (including accessory equipment such as IV poles), paying particular attention to high-touch surfaces, such as control panels.
    • Assure sufficient wet contact time of disinfectant according to label instructions.

Additional considerations:

  • Vaporized hydrogen peroxide and ultraviolet (UV) light applications for decontamination of isolation room surfaces (during terminal disinfection) might serve to disinfect external surfaces of dialysis machines. If UV light is used, the importance of a direct line of sight for efficient disinfection should be considered.

CDC has been in contact with some machine manufacturers and may be able to assist in providing more specific guidance for machine terminal disinfection procedures. Call CDC Emergency Operations Center at 770-488-7100.

Internal pathways

Standard heat or chemical disinfection procedures recommended by machine manufacturers and used routinely by dialysis providers are sufficient to inactivate the virus.

Internal machine disinfection of hemodialysis machines should be performed between treatments and conducted in the isolation room.

Other internal machine components

If there is concern about the possibility of fluid contamination of internal machine components such as pressure monitors, contact the manufacturer for guidance and notify the appropriate local or state health department and CDC Emergency Operations Center at 770-488-7100.