Brass Patrick, Hellmich Martin, Kolodziej Laurentius, Schick Guido, Smith Andrew F
Department of Anaesthesiology, Intensive Care Medicine, and Pain Therapy, Helios Klinikum Krefeld, Lutherplatz 40, Krefeld, Germany, 47805.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Jan 9;1(1):CD011447. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011447.
Central venous catheters can help with diagnosis and treatment of the critically ill. The catheter may be placed in a large vein in the neck (internal jugular vein), upper chest (subclavian vein) or groin (femoral vein). Whilst this is beneficial overall, inserting the catheter risks arterial puncture and other complications and should be performed in as few attempts as possible.In the past, anatomical 'landmarks' on the body surface were used to find the correct place to insert these catheters, but ultrasound imaging is now available. A Doppler mode is sometimes used to supplement plain 'two-dimensional' ultrasound.
The primary objective of this review was to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of two-dimensional ultrasound (US)- or Doppler ultrasound (USD)-guided puncture techniques for subclavian vein, axillary vein and femoral vein puncture during central venous catheter insertion in adults and children. We assessed whether there was a difference in complication rates between traditional landmark-guided and any ultrasound-guided central vein puncture.When possible, we also assessed the following secondary objectives: whether a possible difference could be verified with use of the US technique versus the USD technique; whether there was a difference between using ultrasound throughout the puncture ('direct') and using it only to identify and mark the vein before starting the puncture procedure ('indirect'); and whether these possible differences might be evident in different groups of patients or with different levels of experience among those inserting the catheters.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (2013, Issue 1), MEDLINE (1966 to 15 January 2013), EMBASE (1966 to 15 January 2013), the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) (1982 to 15 January 2013), reference lists of articles, 'grey literature' and dissertations. An additional handsearch focused on intensive care and anaesthesia journals and abstracts and proceedings of scientific meetings. We attempted to identify unpublished or ongoing studies by contacting companies and experts in the field, and we searched trial registers. We reran the search in August 2014. We will deal with any studies of interest when we update the review.
Randomized and quasi-randomized controlled trials comparing two-dimensional ultrasound or Doppler ultrasound versus an anatomical 'landmark' technique during insertion of subclavian or femoral venous catheters in both adults and children.
Three review authors independently extracted data on methodological quality, participants, interventions and outcomes of interest using a standardized form. We performed a priori subgroup analyses.
Altogether 13 studies enrolling 2341 participants (and involving 2360 procedures) fulfilled the inclusion criteria. The quality of evidence was very low (subclavian vein N = 3) or low (subclavian vein N = 4, femoral vein N = 2) for most outcomes, moderate for one outcome (femoral vein) and high at best for two outcomes (subclavian vein N = 1, femoral vein N = 1). Most of the trials had unclear risk of bias across the six domains, and heterogeneity among the studies was significant.For the subclavian vein (nine studies, 2030 participants, 2049 procedures), two-dimensional ultrasound reduced the risk of inadvertent arterial puncture (three trials, 498 participants, risk ratio (RR) 0.21, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.06 to 0.82; P value 0.02, I² = 0%) and haematoma formation (three trials, 498 participants, RR 0.26, 95% CI 0.09 to 0.76; P value 0.01, I² = 0%). No evidence was found of a difference in total or other complications (together, US, USD), overall (together, US, USD), number of attempts until success (US) or first-time (US) success rates or time taken to insert the catheter (US).For the femoral vein, fewer data were available for analysis (four studies, 311 participants, 311 procedures). No evidence was found of a difference in inadvertent arterial puncture or other complications. However, success on the first attempt was more likely with ultrasound (three trials, 224 participants, RR 1.73, 95% CI 1.34 to 2.22; P value < 0.0001, I² = 31%), and a small increase in the overall success rate was noted (RR 1.11, 95% CI 1.00 to 1.23; P value 0.06, I² = 50%). No data on mortality or participant-reported outcomes were provided.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: On the basis of available data, we conclude that two-dimensional ultrasound offers small gains in safety and quality when compared with an anatomical landmark technique for subclavian (arterial puncture, haematoma formation) or femoral vein (success on the first attempt) cannulation for central vein catheterization. Data on insertion by inexperienced or experienced users, or on patients at high risk for complications, are lacking. The results for Doppler ultrasound techniques versus anatomical landmark techniques are uncertain.
中心静脉导管有助于危重症患者的诊断和治疗。导管可置于颈部的大静脉(颈内静脉)、上胸部(锁骨下静脉)或腹股沟(股静脉)。虽然总体上这是有益的,但插入导管有动脉穿刺及其他并发症的风险,且应尽可能减少穿刺次数。过去,体表的解剖“标志”用于确定插入这些导管的正确位置,但现在已有超声成像技术。有时使用多普勒模式来辅助普通的“二维”超声。
本综述的主要目的是评估二维超声(US)或多普勒超声(USD)引导下的穿刺技术在成人和儿童中心静脉导管插入过程中用于锁骨下静脉、腋静脉和股静脉穿刺的有效性和安全性。我们评估了传统标志引导与任何超声引导的中心静脉穿刺在并发症发生率上是否存在差异。若可能,我们还评估了以下次要目的:使用US技术与USD技术是否能证实存在可能的差异;在整个穿刺过程中使用超声(“直接”)与仅在开始穿刺操作前使用超声识别和标记静脉(“间接”)之间是否存在差异;以及这些可能的差异在不同患者群体中或在插入导管者的不同经验水平下是否可能明显。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)(2013年第1期)、MEDLINE(1966年至2013年1月15日)、EMBASE(1966年至2013年1月15日)、护理及相关健康文献累积索引(CINAHL)(1982年至2013年1月15日)、文章参考文献列表、“灰色文献”及学位论文。另外通过手工检索重点关注重症监护和麻醉领域的期刊以及科学会议的摘要和论文集。我们试图通过联系该领域的公司和专家来识别未发表或正在进行的研究,并检索试验注册库。我们于2014年8月重新进行了检索。在更新本综述时,我们将处理任何感兴趣的研究。
比较二维超声或多普勒超声与解剖“标志”技术在成人和儿童锁骨下或股静脉导管插入过程中的随机和半随机对照试验。
三位综述作者使用标准化表格独立提取关于方法学质量、参与者、干预措施和感兴趣结局的数据。我们进行了预先设定的亚组分析。
共有13项研究纳入2,341名参与者(涉及2,360例操作)符合纳入标准。对于大多数结局,证据质量非常低(锁骨下静脉N = 3)或低(锁骨下静脉N = 4,股静脉N = 2),一项结局(股静脉)为中等,两项结局(锁骨下静脉N = 1,股静脉N = 1)最高为高。大多数试验在六个领域的偏倚风险不明确,且研究间的异质性显著。
对于锁骨下静脉(9项研究,2,030名参与者,2,049例操作),二维超声降低了意外动脉穿刺的风险(3项试验,498名参与者,风险比(RR)0.21,95%置信区间(CI)0.06至0.82;P值0.02,I² = 0%)和血肿形成的风险(3项试验, 498名参与者,RR 0.26,95% CI 0.09至0.76;P值0.01,I² = 0%)。未发现总体或其他并发症(合计,US,USD)、总体(合计,US,USD)、成功前的穿刺次数(US)或首次(US)成功率或插入导管所需时间(US)存在差异的证据。
对于股静脉,可供分析的数据较少(4项研究,311名参与者,311例操作)。未发现意外动脉穿刺或其他并发症存在差异的证据。然而,超声引导下首次穿刺成功的可能性更大(3项试验,224名参与者,RR 1.73,95% CI 1.34至2.22;P值<0.0001,I² = 31%),且总体成功率有小幅提高(RR 1.11,95% CI 1.00至1.23;P值0.06,I² = 50%)。未提供关于死亡率或参与者报告结局的数据。
基于现有数据,我们得出结论,与解剖标志技术相比,二维超声在锁骨下静脉(动脉穿刺、血肿形成)或股静脉(首次穿刺成功)置管用于中心静脉导管插入时,在安全性和质量方面有小幅提升。缺乏关于无经验或有经验使用者插入导管的数据,或关于并发症高风险患者的数据。多普勒超声技术与解剖标志技术的结果尚不确定。