Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

A randomized prospective comparison of two FDA approved intravenous catheters in the emergency department setting. The Terumo SurFlash Plus offers novel technologies that promise to increase intravenous access success rates and decrease blood contamination of the insertion site. This study would analyze these properties in our busy, urban emergency department setting where time and safety of intravenous access are most critical.


Clinical Trial Description

Rational for the Study Emergency department (ED) patients frequently require rapid, short-term intravenous (IV) access for diagnosis and treatment of emergency medical conditions. IV access can be uncomfortable and painful for the patient. Therefore ensuring first attempt success is important. Furthermore, given the time-sensitive nature of emergent medical conditions, immediate success helps to minimize delay in analgesic medication administration, resuscitation and therapeutic interventions. The process of obtaining IV access has the potential for operator exposure to blood-borne pathogens. After a tourniquet is placed on an extremity, positive venous pressure forces blood out of the catheter until a lure lock can be applied. Traditional IV catheters require the operator to kink the catheter and apply pressure to the body of the catheter to mitigate the degree of blood leakage while simultaneously connecting the lure lock. This is a complicated process that often leads to blood contamination of the insertion site, and the environment, including the potential for blood spillage on the bedding, ground or the operator. In addition to the potential for blood-born pathogen exposures, this spillage leads to further patient care delays, as it requires prompt cleaning.

Terumo Medical Corp., a leading manufacturer of medical devices, has introduced a novel IV access catheter (which is already FDA approved) with features that promise to increase first attempt success and decrease blood contamination during the insertion process. The Terumo SurFlash Plus catheter has a technology that produces a visible flash of blood at the end of the catheter when the needle is placed in the vessel and a second flash between the catheter and the needle which confirms proper catheter placement in the vein. Furthermore, this new catheter has a proprietary safety valve that minimizes the risk of blood exposure between needle removal and IV lure lock attachment.

This study would analyze these unique properties (first skin puncture success and insertion site blood contamination) in a high volume, urban emergency department where time and safety of IV access are critical.

Purpose of Study Primary Objective: Compare the rate of first-skin puncture success using the Terumo SurFlash Plus compared with the BD Insyte Autoguard.

Secondary Objective: Compare the frequency and severity of blood contamination of the insertion site between the two aforementioned devices.

Research Design This will be a prospective, randomized controlled study of the Terumo SurFlash Plus IV catheter versus the current standard ED IV catheter (BD Insyte Autoguard).

Study device: The Terumo SurFlash Plus catheter is FDA approved and already used at multiple medical centers in the United States. Gauge sizes 18, 20 and 22 will be provided by TERUMO to the ED at no cost to the hospital.

IV inserters (operators) will be Mercy Medical Center emergency department technicians, nurses and providers who routinely obtain IV access in the ED. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02769442
Study type Interventional
Source University of Maryland, Baltimore
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date June 2016
Completion date October 2016

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05299060 - Effectiveness of Cyanoacrylate Glue in the Fixation of Midline and Peripherally Inserted Central Catheters in Hospitalized Adult Patients: Randomised Clinical Trial (CIANO-ETI) N/A
Completed NCT00357799 - VeinViewer for Peripheral IV Placement in Children With Difficult Intravenous (IV) Access Phase 2/Phase 3
Terminated NCT00482742 - Safety & Performance Randomized Study of the CiTop™ Guidewire for Peripheral CTO N/A
Recruiting NCT03474978 - Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter Insertion Site and Complication Rate in Neonates N/A
Completed NCT03563703 - Transfer of Technological Innovations to Nursing Practice: A Contribution to the Prevention of Infections N/A
Completed NCT05265481 - The Effect of Tapping in the Venous Dilatation for Peripheral IV Access N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT02648334 - Randomized Comparison of DCB for the Treatment of Superficial Femoral and Popliteal Peripheral Artery Disease N/A
Completed NCT03148808 - Natural Vascular Scaffold (NVS) Therapy Phase 1
Completed NCT04188262 - Natural Vascular Scaffold (NVS) Therapy for Treatment of Atherosclerotic Lesions (Activate I) Phase 1
Completed NCT04085042 - Impact of a Multimodal Intervention on Peripheral Venous Catheterization of Cancer Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT04856826 - Placement of Peripheral Venous Catheters Under Echo Guidance in a Post-emergency Medical Service N/A
Terminated NCT01104103 - Effectiveness Study of the BOA(R)-Constricting IV Band N/A
Completed NCT00665886 - Compact Closed System Versus Mounted Open System (COSMOS) Phase 4
Completed NCT02795468 - The Usefulness of Ultrasound Guided Technique Insertion of Radial Artery Catheter in Neonates and Infants N/A
Recruiting NCT03592602 - Evaluate the Impact of Arm Abduction and Adduction on the Intravascular Electrocardiograph During PICC Placement and the Tip Location Changes Related to it N/A
Completed NCT04001764 - Comparison of the Efficacy of Radial Artery Catheterization in Three Different Regions in Intensive Care Patients N/A
Completed NCT03197246 - Intravascular ECG During Insertion of Peripheral Inserted Central-venous Catheters: Replacement for Chest X-ray? N/A
Terminated NCT05051020 - Near-infrared Vein Imaging for Peripheral IV Placement N/A
Terminated NCT04262947 - Efficacy of Near-Infrared Vein Imaging for Difficult IV Placement N/A
Completed NCT06033677 - Increasing Security With End-zone Arterial Blood Pressure Monitoring During Surgery N/A