The use of peripherally inserted central catheters (PICCs) represents a major advance for hematological patients, enabling the effective delivery of chemotherapy and/or blood products particularly for prolonged infusions or in situation of difficult venous access. In modern medical practice their use has increased rapidly for several reasons, including ease of insertion, many uses (e.g., drug administration and venous access), perceived safety, and cost-effectiveness compared with centrally inserted central catheters (CICCs).
The use of peripherally inserted central catheters (PICCs) represents a major advance for hematological patients, enabling the effective delivery of chemotherapy and/or blood products particularly for prolonged infusions or in situation of difficult venous access. In modern medical practice their use has increased rapidly for several reasons, including ease of insertion, many uses (e.g., drug administration and venous access), perceived safety, and costeffectiveness compared with centrally inserted central catheters (CICCs). Despite these benefits, PICCs are associated with deep vein thrombosis of the arm and pulmonary embolism. These complications, which are often called venous thromboembolism, are important because they not only complicate and interrupt treatment, but also increase cost, morbidity and mortality. Despite this effect, the burden and risk of PICC-related venous thromboembolism is uncertain and clinicians have scarce evidence on which to base choice of vascular access. Evidence to choose one vascular access over the other is lacking in literature, in particular for patients affected by haematological malignancies, in which chemotherapy is more likely to cause myelosuppression, with a major risk of bloodstream infections. Furthermore, the precise incidence and the risk of PICC-related venous thromboembolism relative to that of other CICCs is unknown. An understanding of this risk in the context of growing PICC use is an important cost and patients safety questions. Up to now, no systematic review has been done to investigate these questions.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
88
Randomization between two well established clinical routine vascular access devices
Randomization between two well established clinical routine vascular access devices
Prof Marco Picardi - Hematology - AOU FEDERICO II
Naples, Italy
Catheter-related bloodstream infections
1\. Cumulative incidence of catheter-related (CR)-major complications: catheter-related bloodstream infections and CR-deep-vein thrombosis.
Time frame: 1 year
Other complications
2\. Occurrence of complications associated with catheter positioning (serious bleeding, arterial puncture and/or pneumothorax), catheter malfunctions (dislocation, occlusion and/or rupture), catheter removals and 30-days overall mortality.
Time frame: 1 year
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