"This series supports the use of routine immediate POCUS for all neonatal PICC lines and consideration of real-time ultrasound-guided PICC placement. Warning signs of intra-arterial placement include abnormal line trajectory on radiographs, insertion site oozing, high pump pressures and limb ischaemia (including contralateral limb involvement)" Douch et al (2026).

Accidental arterial PICC placement in neonatal patients

Abstract:

There is a paucity of literature relating to accidental arterial peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC) placement in neonatal patients. We present a series of nine cases from a single centre. A database of point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) assessments of PICC lines was recorded at a single tertiary neonatal intensive care unit over a 5-year period (2020-25). This database was reviewed and cases of arterial PICC line placement were identified. Of 265 POCUS assessments, intra-arterial PICC placement was identified in 3% (n = 9). High-risk insertion sites include the area posterior to the medial malleolus (n = 3, 33%) and the median cubital fossa (n = 3, 33%). A third of cases (n = 3, 33%) developed no complications. Complications included oozing from the site (n = 3, 33%), high pressure on infusion pumps (n = 2, 22%) and digital ischaemia (n = 3, 33%). All cases of ischemia occurred in lower limb PICCs and the majority (n = 2, 66%) in the contralateral limb to the insertion site, leading to a delay in identification of the arterial placement by 5 to 17 days.

Conclusion: This series supports the use of routine immediate POCUS for all neonatal PICC lines and consideration of real-time ultrasound-guided PICC placement. Warning signs of intra-arterial placement include abnormal line trajectory on radiographs, insertion site oozing, high pump pressures and limb ischaemia (including contralateral limb involvement). Particularly high-risk neonates include those with congenital diaphragmatic hernia whereby mediastinal shift renders radiographic confirmation of PICC position unreliable.

What is known: Neonatal PICC position is usually confirmed by radiography, and accidental arterial cannulation (AAC) is considered rare.

What is new: AAC occurred more frequently than previously reported and was often not detected clinically or on radiographs. Point-of-care ultrasound improved identification of AAC and may improve neonatal PICC safety.


Reference:

Douch C, Duffy D, Shetty S, Richards J, Kulkarni A. Accidental arterial PICC placement in neonatal patients: a case series. Eur J Pediatr. 2026 May 18;185(6):405. doi: 10.1007/s00431-026-07043-w. PMID: 42149194.