Abstract:
Background: In settings where real-time ultrasonography (USG) is unavailable or delayed, landmark-guided central venous access remains essential. Anatomically, the right supraclavicular (SC) route offers a more direct course to the superior vena cava than the infraclavicular (IC) approach, which could shorten procedural time without increasing risk.
Methods: We conducted a prospective, single-centre, parallel-group randomised controlled trial in adult elective cardiac surgery patients (n=70; 35 per arm) comparing landmark-guided right subclavian venous catheterisation via SC versus IC approaches, using a standardised Seldinger technique. The primary outcome was total cannulation time. Secondary outcomes included access time, number of puncture attempts, observer-rated ease of guidewire/catheter passage, success rate and complications. Binary outcomes were analysed for all randomised patients; timing outcomes were assessed in procedures with complete records (n=62; SC: 32, IC: 30).
Results: SC significantly reduced procedure duration. The mean total cannulation time was 2.98±0.59 minutes (SC) versus 3.70±0.77 minutes (IC), with a mean difference of -0.72 minutes (95% confidence interval (CI): -1.07 to -0.37; p<0.001). The mean access time was 17.72±17.89 seconds (SC) versus 35.80±33.63 seconds (IC), with a mean difference of -18.1 seconds (95% CI: -32.0 to -4.2; p=0.012). The distribution of puncture attempts and observer-rated ease scores did not differ materially between groups. Overall success was high (94.3% SC versus 85.7% IC; Fisher's exact test; p=0.428). Complications were infrequent: subclavian arterial puncture occurred in 2/35 (SC) versus 5/35 (IC) (p=0.428); no pneumothorax, haemothorax, haematoma or catheter malposition was observed.
Conclusions: In adult cardiac surgical patients, the SC approach achieves faster landmark-guided right subclavian venous access than the approach, without detectable compromises in success or safety. These findings support routine competence with the SC technique when ultrasound cannot be used and justify larger multicentre trials powered for rare complications and operator-learning effects.
Reference:Shanmuka Srikanth CC, Akula KA, Bharath KM, Vijayalaxmi G, Sayana SB. Comparative Evaluation of Supraclavicular Versus Infraclavicular Approach With Regard to Right Subclavian Vein Catheterisation by Blind Approach. Cureus. 2025 Sep 28;17(9):e93438. doi: 10.7759/cureus.93438. PMID: 41170244; PMCID: PMC12568451.