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Optimal timing for peripheral IV replacement?

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There’s no downside to switching from routine to clinically indicated replacement of peripheral IV catheters. And your patients will appreciate having fewer needlesticks.


 

References

PRACTICE CHANGER

Replace peripheral IV catheters as needed, rather than on a routine basis.1

STRENGTH OF RECOMMENDATION

A: Based on a randomized equivalence trial.

Rickard CM, Webster J, Wallis MC, et al. Routine versus clinically indicated replacement of peripheral intravenous catheters: a randomised controlled equivalence trial. Lancet. 2012;380:1066-1074.

ILLUSTRATIVE CASE

On Day 4 of her hospitalization for a wound infection requiring IV antibiotics, a 45-year-old patient is told by her nurse that her IV catheter must be replaced. It’s hospital policy, the RN says, to replace the catheter every 96 hours. The patient is afraid of needles and is not eager to have her catheter replaced every few days. Is it really necessary to replace the IV, she wants to know.

Each year, nearly 200 million peripheral IV catheters are placed in patients in hospitals throughout the United States.2 Many of the catheters need to be replaced due to phlebitis, infiltration, pain, or swelling at the IV site, but the rate of bloodstream infections associated with peripheral IVs is just 0.5 per 1000 catheter days.2

Timing of replacement is “unresolved”
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)’s 2011 guidelines state that it is not necessary to replace peripheral IV catheters in adults more than every 72 to 96 hours,3 but the CDC does not specify when the catheters should be replaced. For adult patients, the recommendation that a catheter be replaced only for clinical indications is an “unresolved issue,” according to the guidelines. For children, however, replacement only when clinically indicated is recommended by the CDC. Many hospitals have protocols that require replacement of IV catheters every 72 to 96 hours, regardless of clinical indication.

A 2008 study of 755 inpatients compared clinically indicated replacement of IV catheters with routine replacement and found no significant differences in phlebitis and infiltration rates between the 2 groups (38% vs 33%, respectively; relative risk [RR]=1.15; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.95-1.40).4

A 2010 trial randomized 362 hospitalized patients to routine or clinically indicated replacement of peripheral IV lines, with median dwell times of 71 and 85 hours, respectively. There was no significant difference in rates of phlebitis between the routine replacement (7%) and clinically indicated (10%) groups (RR=1.44; 95% CI, 0.71-2.89; P=.34). No local infections or IV-related bloodstream infections occurred in either group.5

A 2010 Cochrane review included 5 randomized controlled trials (with a total of 3408 patients) that compared rates of suspected catheter-related phlebitis in patients whose catheters were routinely replaced with those in the clinically indicated group. The reviewers found no significant increase in phlebitis in the clinically indicated group (9%) vs the routine replacement group (7.2%) (odds ratio=1.24; 95% CI, 0.97-1.60; P=.09).6

Each of these studies had either a relatively small sample size or wide confidence intervals, raising the possibility of missing a real increase in infection due to inadequate statistical power. The study summarized here addressed these concerns.

STUDY SUMMARY: Forgoing routine replacement does not increase risk

Rickard et al1 conducted a multicenter, nonblinded randomized equivalence trial to determine whether routine or clinically indicated removal reduced rates of infection. In the routine group, catheters were replaced every 72 to 96 hours. In the clinically indicated group, catheters were replaced in instances of phlebitis, infiltration, occlusion, accidental removal, or suspected infection related to the catheter.

Participants (N=3283) were inpatients on medical and surgical units who had IV catheters in place and were expected to need treatment for at least 4 days. Individuals whose IV catheters had been placed in an emergency were excluded, as were those who had a known bloodstream infection or who were not expected to have the IV in place for at least 24 hours. Follow-up data were available for all participants.

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