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Supraclavicular Fossa US View for Catheter Positioning in Right Subclavian Central Venous Catheterization

Completed
Conditions
Central Venous Catheter Placement
Interventions
Diagnostic Test: Supraclavicular fossa US scanning
Registration Number
NCT03812757
Lead Sponsor
Skane University Hospital
Brief Summary

The study will evaluate if the supraclavicular fossa ultrasound view can be used to achieve a correct catheter tip placement in infraclavicular right subclavian central venous catheter placement. This may make routine post-procedural x-ray exams redundant.

Detailed Description

Central venous catheterization is one of the most common procedures within intensive care medicine. Verification of correct catheter tip placement is a primary aspect of safety and quality of central venous catheterization as malposition may lead to life-threatening complications such as thrombosis, hemothorax, cardiac tamponade, and arrhythmias. Conventional chest x-ray (CXR) is routinely performed after every insertion and is considered gold standard to examine catheter tip location and evaluate for complications such as pneumo- and hemothorax. However, CXR exposes the patient to ionized radiation, requires a considerable amount of time, and is workload-generating for both ICU and radiology staff.

Weber et al has described the use of the right supraclavicular fossa view for real-time ultrasound-guided placement of a central venous catheter (CVC) via the right internal jugular vein (IJV) in adults. This approach has subsequently been validated in a clinical study and has also been used for supraclavicular subclavian line insertion. The approach requires use of a microconvex probe, which couples good image resolution and high scanning depth. The use of a microconvex probe for infraclavicular subclavian central venous catheter (CVC) insertion has been described previously, but this is the first description of the supraclavicular fossa ultrasound view to guide correct catheter tip placement in infraclavicular right subclavian CVC placement.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
100
Inclusion Criteria
  • Indication for central venous catheter placement.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Operator unable to visualize the subclavian vein (e.g., in those with subcutaneous emphysema of the chest wall),
  • Subclavian vein catheterization deemed inappropriate by the operator,
  • Central line/pacemaker/similar device already in place (risk for misinterpretation of the ultrasound image)

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Supraclavicular fossa US scanningSupraclavicular fossa US scanningFollowing insertion of at least 20 cm of the guidewire into the right subclavian vein, the probe is shifted to the right supraclavicular fossa to scan the right internal jugular vein in order to exclude malposition of the guidewire. The probe is then tilted in a caudal direction to obtain a view of the guidewire within the superior vena cava. Misplaced guidewires will be corrected under real-time ultrasound guidance.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Correct catheter tip positioningPost-procedural x-ray (typically within 24 hours)

Optimal placement (cavoatrial junction, distal superior vena cava); acceptable placement (upper part of the right atrium and entire SVC, provided that the axes of the catheter and vein are aligned to reduce the risk of vessel perforation); unacceptable placement (all other locations).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Mechanical complications within 24 hoursWithin 24 hours after central venous catheterization

Bleeding, cardiac arrhythmias, arterial puncture/cannulation, pneumothorax.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Skånes universitetssjukhus

🇸🇪

Lund, Sweden

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