Incidence, risk factors and medical cost of peripheral intravenous catheter-related complications in hospitalised adult patients

Peripheral intravenous catheters (PVCs) are widely used vascular access devices for infusion therapy; however, they are associated with relatively high failure rates. This study aimed to identify the incidence, risk factors and medical costs of PVC-induced complications in adult hospitalised adult p...

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Published inThe journal of vascular access Vol. 23; no. 1; p. 57
Main Authors Liu, Congcong, Chen, Lin, Kong, Dong, Lyu, Fangfang, Luan, Linlin, Yang, Lijuan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.01.2022
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Abstract Peripheral intravenous catheters (PVCs) are widely used vascular access devices for infusion therapy; however, they are associated with relatively high failure rates. This study aimed to identify the incidence, risk factors and medical costs of PVC-induced complications in adult hospitalised adult patients in China. An observational, prospective study on 1069 patients lasting 5 months was conducted at a tertiary teaching hospital. Infiltration ranked first among PVC complications with an incidence of 17.8%, followed by occlusion (10.8%) and phlebitis (10.5%). Most complications in phlebitis (88.4%) and infiltration (93.7%) were Grade 1. Catheters left in for over 96 h did not show a higher incidence of complications. Patients from the surgical department were more susceptible to infiltration, phlebitis and occlusion. The 26 gauge (Ga) catheters decreased the risk of phlebitis and occlusion, whereas 24Ga catheters increased infiltration rates. Infusing irritant drugs increased phlebitis and infiltration rates. The presence of comorbidities and non-use of needleless connectors were associated with occlusion. Compared with forearm insertion, the risk of occlusion nearly doubled with the dorsum of the hand insertion and the risk of infiltration tripled with antecubital fossa insertion. Medical treatment costs for PVC complications ranged from 0.3 to 140.0 CNY. Infiltration is the most common PVC-related adverse event. Clinically-indicated instead of routine replacement of catheters is safe. More efforts are warranted to improve nurses' adherence to recent guidelines in terms of insertion site selection and needleless connector utilisation to reduce medical costs associated with catheter replacement.
AbstractList Peripheral intravenous catheters (PVCs) are widely used vascular access devices for infusion therapy; however, they are associated with relatively high failure rates. This study aimed to identify the incidence, risk factors and medical costs of PVC-induced complications in adult hospitalised adult patients in China. An observational, prospective study on 1069 patients lasting 5 months was conducted at a tertiary teaching hospital. Infiltration ranked first among PVC complications with an incidence of 17.8%, followed by occlusion (10.8%) and phlebitis (10.5%). Most complications in phlebitis (88.4%) and infiltration (93.7%) were Grade 1. Catheters left in for over 96 h did not show a higher incidence of complications. Patients from the surgical department were more susceptible to infiltration, phlebitis and occlusion. The 26 gauge (Ga) catheters decreased the risk of phlebitis and occlusion, whereas 24Ga catheters increased infiltration rates. Infusing irritant drugs increased phlebitis and infiltration rates. The presence of comorbidities and non-use of needleless connectors were associated with occlusion. Compared with forearm insertion, the risk of occlusion nearly doubled with the dorsum of the hand insertion and the risk of infiltration tripled with antecubital fossa insertion. Medical treatment costs for PVC complications ranged from 0.3 to 140.0 CNY. Infiltration is the most common PVC-related adverse event. Clinically-indicated instead of routine replacement of catheters is safe. More efforts are warranted to improve nurses' adherence to recent guidelines in terms of insertion site selection and needleless connector utilisation to reduce medical costs associated with catheter replacement.
Author Liu, Congcong
Kong, Dong
Lyu, Fangfang
Yang, Lijuan
Chen, Lin
Luan, Linlin
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  givenname: Lijuan
  surname: Yang
  fullname: Yang, Lijuan
  organization: Department of Nursing, Shandong Provincial Hospital Affiliated to Shandong First Medical University, Shandong, China
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Keywords catheter failure
Peripheral venous catheter
phlebitis
occlusion
infiltration
Language English
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PublicationTitle The journal of vascular access
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Snippet Peripheral intravenous catheters (PVCs) are widely used vascular access devices for infusion therapy; however, they are associated with relatively high failure...
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StartPage 57
SubjectTerms Adult
Catheter-Related Infections - etiology
Catheterization, Peripheral
Catheters - adverse effects
Humans
Incidence
Phlebitis - diagnosis
Phlebitis - epidemiology
Phlebitis - etiology
Prospective Studies
Risk Factors
Title Incidence, risk factors and medical cost of peripheral intravenous catheter-related complications in hospitalised adult patients
URI https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33302797
Volume 23
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