Outpatient percutaneous central venous access in cancer patients

J. Ralph Broadwater, Michael A. Henderson, John L. Bell, Michael J. Edwards, G. Jeffrey Smith, David R. McCready, Richard S. Swanson, Mark E.R. Hardy, Robert R. Shenk, Millie Lawson, David M. Ota, Charles M. Balch

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

33 Scopus citations

Abstract

A 1-year experience of percutaneous subclavian catheterization in outpatients with cancer was reviewed to document reliability, safety, and cost. There were 763 catheter insertions attempted with prospective documentation of complications in 664 consecutive patients. Catheter insertion was successful in 722 attempts (95%). There were only 13 pneumothoraces (2%). Thiry catheters required repositioning (4%). The average catheter duration was 191 days (range: 0 to 892 days). Fifty-six catheters (8%) were removed because of suspected infection. Documented catheter sepsis occurred in 21 patients (3%); catheter site infection occurred in 8 patients (1%). Thus, only 0.22 infections per catheter year occurred during this 382 catheter-year experience. The estimated cost of catheter insertion was $562, which is one-third the estimated cost for tunneled catheters ($1,403) and for reservoir devices ($1,738). In our experience, percutaneous subclavian catheterization is a reliable, cost-effective method compared with tunneled or reservoir devices, with an equivalent incidence of catheter-related infections. The cornerstone of our success with this program is a staff dedicated to catheter care and intensive patient education. In centers where a large number of patients require central venous access, percutaneous catheterization should be the technique of choice.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)676-680
Number of pages5
JournalThe American Journal of Surgery
Volume160
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1990

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Surgery

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