Phlebitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
In-line Filtration Reduces Postoperative Venous Peripheral Phlebitis Associated With Cannulation: a Randomised Clinical Trial
The aim of this study is to demonstrate the efficacy of in-line filtration in reducing the
incidence of postoperative phlebitis associated with peripheral short-term vascular access.
In this controlled trial, 268 surgical patients are 1:1 randomised to in-line filtration
(study group) and standard care (control group). The incidence of phlebitis (defined as
Visual Infusion Phlebitis, VIP score≥2) within 48hrs postoperatively is compared between the
two groups, as well as the onset and severity of phlebitis and the reasons for removal of
the cannula. The lifespan of venous cannulae and cost-of-care are compared for the study and
control groups through a Kaplan-Meier curve. Multivariate Cox regression analysis is
performed to evaluate the effect of in-line filtration on risk of phlebitis and cannula
removal.
A randomised, controlled, clinical trial is performed at the Department of Anesthesia and
Intensive Care of the Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Careggi in Florence, Italy, to
assess the effects of in-line filtration on the incidence of postoperative phlebitis. The
Ethical Committee of the institution has approved the study (CEAV IN17/0000015). Patients
preoperatively sign consent forms for participation in this trial.
An incidence of phlebitis equal to 50% within 48 hrs from peripheral venous cannulation has
been preliminarily described in our centre during standard care (unpublished data). Two
hundred and sixty-eight patients undergoing surgery are 1:1 randomised to in-line filtration
(study group) and standard care (control group) to observe a 20% reduction in postoperative
phlebitis within 48 hrs after surgery in the study group through a one-side chi-square
analysis with statistical power of 90% and statistical significance of 0.025.
Every surgical patient scheduled for surgery, who preoperatively signed the consent form and
underwent peripheral venous cannulation, is considered for this study. Patients undergoing
central venous catheterisation or long-/middle-term peripheral cannulation are excluded.
On the day of surgery, all enrolled patients undergo standard peripheral venous cannulation
according to the up-to-date standard of care. After placement of venous cannula and before
the induction of anaesthesia, patients are randomised for in-line filtration or standard
care.
For patients randomized to in-line filtration, in-line filters (Pall, Dreieich, Germany) are
used during anaesthesia and the following 96 postoperative hours.
Patients randomised to standard care (control group) are managed without an in-line filter
and according to local routine practice for intravenous drug administration in the adult
patient. The enrolment in this study don't influence the type of anaesthesia or the
postoperative pharmacological treatment previously scheduled for the patient.
The incidence and severity of phlebitis are evaluated using the Visual Infusion Phlebitis
(VIP) Score every 12 hrs from the end of surgery until 96 hrs postoperatively. The
postoperative VIP score evaluations are performed by another author, blinded to each
patient's randomisation group. This filter are held by containment bands on the patient's
arm and are completely covered by a breathable dressing medication to maintain the evaluator
blind on the patient's randomisation group. The dressing medication never covers the vein
where the cannulae are placed. Transparent dressing is used for cannula medication to allow
cannulation site inspection
Phlebitis is defined as a VIP score ≥2. The primary end-point of the study is to assess the
incidence of phlebitis in the 48 postoperative hours using a Fisher's exact test. Time and
severity of phlebitis and time and causes for venous cannula removal are all compared
between groups. In particular, data distribution is assessed through the Shapiro-Wilk test.
Continuous data are presented as a median and interquartile range (IQR) or mean ± standard
deviation (SD) and analysed through a Mann-Whitney or Student's t-test, according to data
distribution. Qualitative data are presented as percentages and analysed through chi-square
analysis. The Bonferroni adjustment is used for multiple comparisons. The lifespan of the
cannulae is described for the study and the control groups through the Kaplan-Meier curve.
Multivariate Cox regression analysis with a backwards selection is performed to evaluate the
effect of in-line filtration on the risk of phlebitis and cannula removal, independently
from other factors. Results are presented as p-value, hazard ratio (HR) and 95% confident
interval (95%CI)
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