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Central venous access sites for the prevention of venous thrombosis, stenosis and infection in patients requiring long-term intravenous therapyHamilton HC, Foxcroft D SummaryCentral venous access sites to prevent venous blood clots, blood vessel narrowing and infection in patients requiring long-term intravenous therapyCentral venous access (CVA) involves a large bore long-term use catheter routed through a vein in the neck, upper chest or groin (femoral) area, to give drugs that cannot be given by mouth or via a conventional needle (or tube (cannula) in the arm over the longer term. This review examined whether there was any evidence to show that CVA through any one site (neck, upper chest or femoral area) was better than any other. Results from one high quality randomized trial indicated that the upper chest area was better than the femoral area because of a lower risk of infection and blood clots forming on the catheter tip. No studies compared the neck access site with other sites so no conclusions can be drawn about the relative advantages or disadvantages of access in the neck.
This is a Cochrane review abstract and plain language summary, prepared and maintained by The Cochrane Collaboration, currently published in The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2008 Issue 3, Copyright © 2008 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.. The full text of the review is available in The Cochrane Library (ISSN 1464-780X).
This version first published online:
July 18. 2007 AbstractBackgroundCentral venous access (CVA), in which a large bore catheter is routed through a vein in the neck, upper chest or femoral area, is needed to give drugs that cannot be given by mouth or via a conventional cannula in the arm. ObjectivesTo establish whether either the jugular, subclavian or femoral CVA routes result in a lower incidence of venous thrombosis, venous stenosis or infection related to CVA devices. To determine whether the circumference of a long-term central venous access device influences the incidence of venous thrombosis, venous stenosis or infection related to CVA devices. Search strategyWe searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (The Cochrane Library 2006, Issue 4), MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE (from inception to December 2006), reference lists of identified trials, and bibliographies of published reviews. We also contacted researchers in the field. There were no language restrictions. Selection criteriaWe included randomized controlled trials comparing central venous catheter insertion routes. Data collection and analysisTwo authors assessed potentially relevant studies. We resolved disagreements by discussion. Relevant outcomes were: venous thrombosis, venous stenosis, infection related to CVA devices, mechanical complications (e.g misplaced catheter, minor bleeding, haematoma). Main resultsWe considered 83 studies for inclusion in the review. Six studies appeared eligible but five were subsequently excluded because they did not randomize participants for either site of access or catheter circumference size. One study was a high quality block randomized controlled trial. Allocation concealment was good and randomization was by a central computer. In all, 293 patients were randomized to a femoral or a subclavian CVA group. Results from this one trial were as follows
1. Catheter-related infectious complications
2. Catheter-related mechanical complications
3. Catheter-related thrombotic complications Authors' conclusionsSubclavian CVA is preferable to femoral CVA. Further trials of subclavian versus femoral or jugular CVA are needed. Research on the impact of catheter circumference on catheter-related complications is required. |
