Randomized controlled trial comparing femoral vs internal jugular insertion site of central venous catheters (CVC) in newborns and infants undergoing cardiac surgery. The experimental hypothesis is that the jugular insertion site is superior to the femoral in terms of catheter colonization.
Background: in adult patients, the femoral site of insertion of CVC is notoriously at higher risk of colonization and central-line associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI) than other sites (jugular or subclavian). In pediatric patients, the femoral site is more commonly used than in adult patients, but there is no sound data on catheter colonization and CLABSI related to the insertion site. The experimental hypothesis of this randomized controlled trial (RCT) is that the jugular insertion site is less likely to induce catheter colonization and CLABSI than the femoral site. Methods: 160 patients under 1 year and scheduled for cardiac surgery will be included in this RCT; patients will be randomly allocated to the jugular (J Group) or Femoral (F Group). CVC insertion will be performed by one out of three selected expert operators. The primary endpoint is the catheter colonization based on identification of bacterial grow into the catheter at removal time; CLABSI and CRBSI rate based on the same bacterial identification into the catheter tip and in the blood culture performed in case of signs and symptoms of infection. Secondary endpoints are mechanical complications defined as arterial puncture immediately identified during procedure, hemothorax and pneumothorax; and procedural difficulty during insertion defined as number of attempts, no guidewire progress, duration of the procedure (time from the completion of the sterile precaution barriers and the catheter fixation.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Double lumen CVC insertion in the internal jugular vein
IRCCS Policlinico S.Donato
San Donato Milanese, Milan, Italy
CVC colonization
CVC positive culture after removal
Time frame: 14 days
CRBSI
Positive CVC culture and blood stream infection for the same organism
Time frame: 14 days
CLABSI
A laboratory-confirmed bloodstream infection where central line was in place for more than 48h.
Time frame: More than 48 hours
Mechanical complications
Defined as arterial puncture; hemothorax; pneumothorax
Time frame: 1 day
Procedural difficulty
Defined by number of attempts; no guidewire progress
Time frame: 1 hour
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