Deep Vein Thrombosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Novel Strategy to Encourage Early Removal of Central Venous Catheters
The goal of this study is to determine if early placement of a midline catheter in patients with a central venous catheter (CVC) will decrease the number of days the CVC is in place. Patients who are in the medical intensive care unit (MICU) and have a CVC may be approached to join the study. Those who meet study eligibility and provide written consent will be enrolled. The longer the CVC remains in place,the greater the chance of developing an infection or blood clot. Any IV line that is placed (CVC, midline, peripheral line) comes with the risk of infection or blood clots, although that risk is generally less with the midline and peripheral IV lines than a CVC. The treating team will make the decision when to remove the CVC. The timeline of removal will be compared to previous data collected on patients similar to the ones in this study. During their hospital stay, study patients will be monitored for how well the midline catheter is functioning as well as if they develop a catheter related blood clot or infection.
Central line-associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI) remains a serious problem contributing
to patient morbidity and mortality. These potentially preventable complications have high
costs. Significant interventions focusing on insertion of catheter and care and maintenance
protocols have been helpful in reducing CLABSI rates. One component that remains a challenge
is early/appropriate removal of central venous catheters (CVCs). The longer the central line
remains in the patient, the increased chance of developing a CLABSI.
The study design is case-controlled with a control group composed of patients admitted in the
previous year who received a CVC as part of the treatment plan and who did not received a
midline catheter.The intervention phase of this study will involve placement of a standard of
care, FDA approved midline catheter in patients that have a CVC. The Medical Intensive Care
Unit (MICU) treating team will be consulted prior to approaching the patient. Written
informed consent will be obtained from the patient or legal authorized representative prior
to enrollment. The midline catheters will be inserted by the vascular access team within 24
hours of CVC insertion. Midline catheters will be assessed daily for function, phlebitis, and
infection for up to 7 days. Mechanical complications or premature line failures will be
tracked. Data specific to blood sampling will be collected daily. If the catheter was
identified to have failed during follow-up assessment the date and time of failure and the
reason for failure will be documented. If the catheter failed or was removed prior to the
follow-up assessment then the VAD failure time and the assessment of failure and reason for
line removal will be obtained through chart review. For all failed catheters, re-insertion
attempt data will be tracked through the medical record. If the patient is discharged prior
to the time of follow-up assessment then the time of discharge will be documented and the VAD
will be presumed functional until time of discharge unless otherwise noted in the chart. Some
patients may leave the hospital with VAD in place for additional intravenous therapies. This
information will be noted, but these patients will not receive follow-up assessments
post-discharge for the research.If the patient has the midline longer than 7 days, the status
of the line will be assessed via documentation in the electronic health record (EHR). The
decision to remove the CVC is up to the treating physician.
Midline catheters will be assessed by research staff daily for usage. The medication
administration record will be queried for all medications given through each catheter.
Specifically, at the bedside we will assess whether the midline catheter is being used for
any purpose. Of interest is the use of vesicants through the midline, medications that are
generally given via central line or considered caustic to the vessel will be noted in both
groups. Number of doses will be recorded.
Rates of symptomatic upper extremity superficial venous thrombosis (SVT) and deep venous
thrombosis (DVT) rates, as confirmed by sonography will be calculated. Radiology
interpretations will be reviewed for findings consistent with catheter-related symptomatic
upper extremity venous thrombosis (CR-UEVT). This review will occur thirty days post patient
discharge. Symptoms and rationale for imaging will be documented. If the patient is diagnosed
with thrombophlebitis, the location of the thrombus will also be documented.
Infection rate will be tracked using confirmed catheter-related blood stream infection data
from the surveillance team within the epidemiology department. The team utilizes the CDC
definition of laboratory-confirmed blood-stream infection (LCBSI). The IV team will assess
all IV insertions sites for infection.
The control data was collected as a separate IRB-approved study. Additional data for control
and intervention groups includes but is not limited to: patient medical record number (MRN),
sex, age, admission diagnosis (top 2), discharge diagnosis (top 2), admission from Emergency
center/floor/transfer, Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), date of central line placement, date
of central line removal, location of central line, number of lumens, medications with
particular attention to drips and vesicants, ICU length of stay, hospital length of stay,
disposition from the ICU, CLABSI. Baseline variables will be evaluated for differences
between cases and controls. Matching will be used to select the controls used for analysis.
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