Evaluating the Role of the Guidewire in Peripheral Intravenous Access: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Ultrasound-Guided Catheter Survival
NCT ID: NCT06107361
Last Updated: 2026-01-16
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
360 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2023-11-07
2026-05-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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A catheter is functional if the clinician participant is able to aspirate blood and/or flush without resistance with 3-5 milliliters (mL) of saline. Other insertion-related data variables collected at the time of insertion or retrospectively, include: clinician participant details, number of insertion attempts, patient pertinent medical history specifically assessing for history of difficult access on a previous visit, End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) on dialysis, IV drug abuse, sickle cell disease, vitals, age, sex, race, body mass index, first-stick success, cannulation success or failure, vein diameter, vein depth, number of venous access attempts, time of IV insertion, location of IV insertion, and distance of IV insertion (skin puncture site) from the crease of the arm. A venous access attempt is defined as each time the needle punctures the skin. Movement or adjustment in subcutaneous tissue is not considered an additional attempt unless the needle is completely withdrawn and reinserted.
Once the IV is placed, follow-ups will be completed beginning the day after enrollment. Assessments will be conducted in person and/or by communication with the clinical team nurse to assess functionality, status of IV dressing/dressing changes, and signs/symptoms of complications. Assessment for complications includes normal appearance, pain, redness, swelling, induration, appearance of a palpable venous cord at or near IV site. This data will then be used by the clinical research nurse or Principal Investigator to assess for phlebitis. Patients will be assessed for clinical phlebitis using a standardized scale (Table 1). This scale is scored from 0 to 5, 0 being no signs of phlebitis and 5 being advanced stage of thrombophlebitis.
Daily follow ups will be completed until the IV has been removed or has failed. If the catheter failed or was removed prior to the follow-up assessment, then the IV failure time and the assessment of failure and reason for line removal will be obtained through chart review or through discussion with the participant's care team. The options for cause of removal include: (1) completion of therapy (2) infiltration (3) infection (4) dislodgement (5) leaking (6) pain (7) other and (8) unknown. For all failed catheters, re-insertion attempt data will be tracked through the medical record in the nursing section for venous lines and need for reinsertion of the IV or escalation to a midline, peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC), or central venous catheter (CVC) will be noted. The time interval from removal of failed device to the insertion of a new device will be noted as the treatment delay interval recorded in hours.
Superficial thrombophlebitis (SVT) and deep venous thrombosis (DVT) rates will be calculated based on upper extremity proven diagnosis of SVT and/or DVT in symptomatic cases. Pulmonary embolism rates will also be captured based on computed tomography (CT) chest diagnosis or ventilation perfusion (V/Q) nuclear test result of high probability for pulmonary embolism. Key personnel approved by Institutional Review Board will review all study subject records in the electronic medical records system, and screen enrolled subject data for all upper extremity venous doppler test, chest CTs, and V/Q examinations. Radiology interpretations will be reviewed for findings consistent with catheter related upper extremity venous thrombosis or pulmonary embolism. Presence or absence of thrombosis will be noted. If the patient is diagnosed with thrombophlebitis, the location of the thrombus will also be documented. This review will account for thrombosis development up to 30 days post patient discharge. Symptoms and rationale for imaging will be documented. As long peripheral IVs are inserted into the deep veins of the arms at times, DVT is a known complication.
Infection rate will be tracked using confirmed catheter-related blood stream infection data from the surveillance team within the epidemiology department. The team utilizes the Centers for Disease Control definition of laboratory-confirmed blood-stream infection (LCBSI).
The medication administration record will be reviewed for anticoagulants and select irritant and vesicants given through each catheter. Vesicant drugs can result in tissue necrosis or formation of blisters when accidentally infused into tissue surrounding a vein. Vesicants that are generally given via central line or considered caustic to the vessel will be noted in both groups. Number of doses will be recorded.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
OTHER
NONE
Study Groups
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Arm 1 (6.35cm 20 gauge ultralong intravenous catheter)
Arm 1 Device: B. Braun 6.35cm 20 gauge ultralong intravenous catheter
B. Braun 6.35cm 20 gauge ultralong intravenous catheter
B Braun Medical Inc, 6.35cm 20 gauge ultralong intravenous catheter
Arm 2 (5.71 cm 20 gauge Accucath)
Arm 2 Device: BD 5.71 cm 20 gauge Accucath, ultralong intravenous catheter with guide wire
BD 5.71 cm 20 gauge Accucath
Bard Access Systems, Inc, BD 5.71 cm 20 gauge ultralong intravenous catheter with guide wire
Interventions
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B. Braun 6.35cm 20 gauge ultralong intravenous catheter
B Braun Medical Inc, 6.35cm 20 gauge ultralong intravenous catheter
BD 5.71 cm 20 gauge Accucath
Bard Access Systems, Inc, BD 5.71 cm 20 gauge ultralong intravenous catheter with guide wire
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Vascular Access Score:
1. Visible with distention and easily palpable
2. Visible and easily palpable
3. Not visible and easily palpable
4. Visible and poorly palpable
5. Not visible and poorly or non-palpable
Clinician working in the emergency department at Corewell Health William Beaumont University Hospital (physician, advanced practice provider, nurse, technician) Competency in Operation STICK, which is an vascular access training program.
Exclusion Criteria
None
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Corewell Health East
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Amit Bahl
Director Emergency Medicine Ultrasound
Principal Investigators
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Amit Bahl, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Corewell Health East
Locations
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Beaumont Hospital - Royal Oak
Royal Oak, Michigan, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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2023-221
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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