Risk Factors for Infusion-related Phlebitis with Small Peripheral Venous Catheters
- 15 May 1991
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by American College of Physicians in Annals of Internal Medicine
- Vol. 114 (10) , 845-854
- https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-114-10-845
Abstract
To identify risk factors for infusion-related phlebitis with peripheral intravenous catheters. A randomized trial of two catheter materials, with consideration of 21 potential risk factors. A university hospital. Hospitalized adults without granulocytopenia who received a peripheral intravenous catheter. House officers or ward nurses inserted the catheters, and each insertion was randomized to a catheter made of tetrafluoroethylene-hexafluoropropylene (FEP-Teflon) or a novel polyetherurethane without leachable additives (PEU-Vialon). Research nurses scored insertion sites each day for inflammation and cultured catheters at removal. The Kaplan-Meier risk for phlebitis exceeded 50% by day 4 after catheterization. intravenous antibiotics (relative risk, 2.00), female sex (relative risk, 1.88), prolonged (greater than 48 hours) catheterization (relative risk, 1.79), and catheter material (PEU-Vialon: FEP-Teflon) (relative risk, 0.73) strongly predicted phlebitis in a Cox proportional hazards model (each, P less than 0.003). The best-fit model for severe phlebitis identified the same predictors plus catheter-related infection (relative risk, 6.19), phlebitis with a previous catheter (relative risk, 1.54), and anatomic site (hand: forearm, relative risk, 0.71; wrist:forearm, relative risk, 0.60). The low incidence of local catheter-related infection was comparable with the two catheter materials (5.4% [95% CI, 3.8% to 7.6%] and 6.9% [CI, 4.9% to 9.6%]); none of the 1054 catheters prospectively studied caused bacteremia. Multiple factors, including the infusate and the duration of cannulation, contribute to the development of infusion-related phlebitis. The use of peripheral intravenous catheters made of PEU-Vialon appears to pose the same risk for catheter-related infection as the use of catheters made of FEP-Teflon, and PEU-Vialon can permit longer cannulation with less risk for phlebitis. The risk for catheter-related bacteremia with FEP-Teflon and PEU-Vialon catheters is sufficiently low that it no longer seems justifiable to recommend the use of small steel needles for most peripheral intravenous therapy.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prevention of Infusion ThrombophlebitisActa Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica, 1985
- Infusion-Related Phlebitis — Is the In-Line Filter the Solution?New England Journal of Medicine, 1985
- Microparticulate-Induced PhlebitisNew England Journal of Medicine, 1985
- Effects of dressing type and change interval on intravenous therapy complication ratesDiagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease, 1984
- Material thrombogenicity in central venous catheterization: a comparison between soft, antebrachial catheters of silicone elastomer and polyurethaneJournal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 1984
- BACTERIAL ADHERENCE TO PLASTICSThe Lancet, 1984
- A prospective trial comparing a silicone elastomer intravenous cannula (Visis) with a polytetrafluoroethylene cannula (Cathlon)British Journal of Surgery, 1982
- Movelat in the prophylaxis of infusion thrombophlebitis.BMJ, 1979
- TISSUE NECROSIS CAUSED BY COMMONLY USED INTRAVENOUS INFUSIONSThe Lancet, 1978
- A Semiquantitative Culture Method for Identifying Intravenous-Catheter-Related InfectionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1977