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"Catheter-related complications were reduced when the tip of the Midline Catheter was located in the subclavian or axillary vein of the chest wall" Zhao et al (2023).

Midline catheter tip position and complication rates

Abstract:

Background: The use of midline catheters (MCs) in intravenous therapy has increased over the last few years; however, scientific evidence is scarce. The recommendations for its specific tip position and safe use in antimicrobial therapy are not well established, which increases the risk of catheter-related complications.

Objective: This study aimed to provide evidence for selecting MC tip positions for safe use in antimicrobial therapy.

Design: This prospective, randomized controlled trial compared catheter-related complications with different tip positions. Participants were assigned to three different catheter tip groups, and the relationship between the tip position and catheter-related complications was observed during antimicrobial therapy.

Setting: Multicenter trial based in intravenous therapy centers at six Chinese hospitals.

Participants: A fixed-point continuous convenience sampling method was used to enroll 330 participants. Three different study groups with equal numbers of participants (n = 110) were established using a randomization technique.

Methods: The incidence of catheter-related complications and catheter retention time was compared among the three groups. The catheter measurement data between the three groups were compared using one-way ANOVA or the Kruskal-Wallis tests. Counting data were compared using chi-square tests, Fisher’s exact tests, and Kruskal-Wallis tests. Post-hoc tests were conducted to compare the incidence of complications among the three groups. We followed a time-to-event analysis approach and used Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank tests to analyze the relationship between catheter-related complications and different tip positions.

Results: The total incidence of catheter-related complications in Experimental Groups 1 and 2 as well as the control group were 10.09%, 17.98%, and 33.73%, respectively. Statistically significant differences existed between the groups (p < 0.0001). In pairwise comparisons of the three groups, significant differences were evident in the incidence of complications between Experimental Group 1 and the control group (RD 19.40%, confidence interval 7.71-31.09). No statistical significance in the incidence of complications between Experimental Group 1 and Experiment Group 2 (RD -4.93%, confidence interval -14.80-4.95) and in the incidence of complications between Experimental Group 2 and the control group (RD 14.47%, confidence interval 1.82-27.12) were noted.

Conclusion: Catheter-related complications were reduced when the tip of the Midline Catheter was located in the subclavian or axillary vein of the chest wall.

Trial registration: NCT04601597(https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04601597). Registration date: September 1, 2020.


Reference:

Zhao L, Fan X, Zhao L, Cai Z, Jiang F, Zhao R. Midline catheter tip position and catheter-related complications in antimicrobial therapy: A multi-center randomized controlled trial. Int J Nurs Stud. 2023 Mar 3;141:104476. doi: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2023.104476. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 36972639.

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