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Clinical Trial Summary

Venepuncture can be challenging, especially in patients with co-morbidities that predispose them to have inaccessible veins. Multiple unsuccessful venepuncture attempts compromise patient care. It causes pain, delays in obtaining blood samples for investigations and instituting intra-venous treatment. Venepuncture assistive devices (VAD) include ultrasonography, and devices that utilize infra-red or transillumination. These are expensive, not widely available, and have not been rigorously proven to be effective. We have previously performed a preliminary study using an ordinary pen-torch for transillumination showed promising results. 95% of patients with known difficult venous access required two or less attempts for successful cannulation. It costs 35 times cheaper compared to the cheapest VAD in the market. The concept is promising but the technique cumbersome. Building upon the concept of transillumination, the aim of this study is to develop an idiot-proof cost-effective pocket-sized VAD (TenTaTorch) to improve venepuncture success. A randomized controlled trial (RCT) will be conducted to determine its safety and efficacy. The TenTaTorch prototype will be modelled using Computer-Aided Design (Inventor®, Autodesk®, California, USA) and fabricated using 3D-printing, with silicon casting. Compared to existing VADs, TenTaTorch consists of finger-mounted LED light sources that allows greater manoeuvrability during transillumination. We include adult patients aged 21 to 100 with difficult venous access (history of ≥3 consecutive attempts required for successful cannulation during the current admission) requiring non-emergent venepuncture in the RCT. Each patient undergoes venepuncture over the upper-limb using one of the following: Conventional Venepuncture without aid (Control 1); Veinlite® EMS (TransLite®, Texas, USA) (Control 2), a commercial transillumination device; our device TenTaTorch (Experimental Group). Outcome measures include: successful cannulation within 2 attempts; duration of venepuncture; subjective user feedback. Fisher's exact and Kruskal-Wallis tests will be performed.


Clinical Trial Description

This is a prospective randomized controlled trial. Patients with a history of difficult venepuncture who agreed to be enter into the study will be randomized into one of three groups using a sealed envelope system: Conventional Venepuncture without aid (Control 1); Veinlite® EMS (TransLite®, Texas, USA) (Control 2), a commercial transillumination device; our device TenTaTorch (Experimental Group). Hemodynamically unstable patients are excluded. The nurse involved in the care of the patient will attempt venepuncture over the upper limb. A group of nurses will be recruited before the start of patient recruitment. A maximum of 4 times attempts is allowed, before escalation to a doctor/phlebotomist. A standardized venepuncture technique using standardized instruments will be utilized. A tourniquet is applied (Braun® International, USA). Veins will be localized using one of the above techniques. Both Veinlite and TenTaTorch utilize the concept of transillumination. Placing it onto the skin will cause the outlines of the veins to show up. Once a suitable vein is localized, the vein is marked with a pen. The area of the skin to be cannulated is disinfected with an alcohol wipe (Webcol®, Covidien®, USA). For the setting of IV cannulation, a standardized IV cannula (ranging 18 to 25 gauge) is used (Introcan Safety®, Braun®, USA). Normal saline (PosiFlush® 3ml, BD®, USA) will be used for flushing the cannula after successful cannulation. For blood taking, a syringe (Terumo®, Philippines) ranging from 2ml to 20ml and a needle (ranging between 18 to 25 gauge) (Venofix®, Braun®, USA) will be used. All instruments needed for venepuncture, including 4 IV cannula or 4 needles should be by the patient's bedside prior to the start of each venepuncture attempt. Duration of the procedure will be recorded using a stop watch. This is defined as the time (in minutes) from the start of attempt to localize a vein to its successful cannulation. Successful cannulation is defined either as the ability to flush 2ml of normal saline into the IV cannula or the ability to draw 2ml of blood from the vein. A post-procedure questionnaire will be filled up by the nurses after the attempt at venepuncture. Outcome data include: number of attempts and duration needed for successful venepuncture. Patient data include: age, sex, race, body-mass index, history of intra-venous drug abuse, and renal function. Nurses who consent to join the study will be required to participate in a pre- trial tutorial which is estimated to last for 1 hour. During the tutorial, techniques of locating veins using TenTaTorch and by using the Veinlite® device will be taught. A standardized technique of venepuncture will also be taught. Tutorial will be in the form of slide- show presentation and hands-on training. During the hands-on training, nurses will attempt to identify veins on fellow trainees using both TenTaTorch and Veinlite®. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03202238
Study type Interventional
Source National University Hospital, Singapore
Contact Elijah Cai, MBBS, MRCS
Phone 97203639
Email elijah_cai@nuhs.edu.sg
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date September 29, 2019
Completion date October 5, 2023

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