Author Affiliations: Lynn Hadaway Associates, Inc, Milner, Georgia (Hadaway); Clinical Education Specialist, Ascension at Home, Brentwood, Tennessee (Gorski).
Lynn Hadaway, MEd, RN, CRNI, has 50 years of experience in infusion nursing and adult education. Her clinical experience comes from infusion therapy teams in multiple acute care settings. She is president of Lynn Hadaway Associates, Inc, an education and consulting company started in 1996. She has authored more than 75 published articles on infusion therapy and vascular access, written 8 textbook chapters on infusion therapy, and is the clinical editor for the book Infusion Therapy Made Incredibly Easy. She served on the Infusion Nurses Society (INS) Standards of Practice committees to revise the 2006, 2011, 2016, and 2021 documents and the committees to revise the 2014 and 2022 SHEA Compendium CLABSI chapter. She is a past chair of the INCC Board of Directors, INS Member of the Year in 2007, and adjunct associate professor at Griffith University in Queensland, Australia. Lisa A. Gorski, MS, RN, HHCNS-BC, CRNI, FAAN, served as the chairperson for the 2017 and 2024 Vesicant Task Force. She has worked for more than 40 years as a clinical nurse specialist and educator. She is the author of several books and more than 70 book chapters and journal articles. She is an INS past president (2007-2008), past chair of the INCC Board of Directors, and has served as the chair of the INS Standards of Practice Committee for the 2011, 2016, and 2021 editions and co-chair for the 2024 Standards. Ms. Gorski speaks nationally and internationally on standards development, infusion therapy/vascular access, and home health care.
J Infus Nurs. 2024;47(5):324-346. doi: 10.1097/NAN.0000000000000566. Epub 2024 Aug 27.
Midline catheters have recently gained popularity in clinical use, with a common reason being the reduction of central venous catheter use and central line-associated bloodstream infections. At the same time, the number of nononcology vesicant medications has increased, and midline catheters are frequently being used for infusions of vesicant medications. The Infusion Nurses Society (INS) Vesicant Task Force identified midline catheter use as a possible risk factor for extravasation and concluded that a thorough literature review was necessary. This review highlights the variations in catheter terminology and tip locations, the frequency of infiltration and extravasation in published studies, and case reports of infiltration and extravasation from midline catheters. It also examines the many clinical issues requiring evidence-based decision-making for the most appropriate type of vascular access devices. After more than 30 years of clinical practice with midline catheters and what appears to be a significant number of studies, evidence is still insufficient to answer questions about infusion of vesicant and irritant medications through midline catheters. Given the absence of consensus on tip location, inadequate evidence of clinical outcomes, and importance of patient safety, the continuous infusion of vesicants, all parenteral nutrition formulas, and infusates with extremes in pH and osmolarity should be avoided through midline catheters.
中线导管在临床应用中最近越来越受欢迎,一个常见的原因是减少中心静脉导管的使用和中心静脉相关血流感染。与此同时,非肿瘤刺激性药物的数量增加,中线导管经常被用于输注刺激性药物。输液治疗护士协会(INS)刺激性药物工作组将中线导管的使用确定为外渗的一个可能危险因素,并得出结论认为有必要进行彻底的文献复习。这篇综述强调了导管术语和尖端位置的变化、在已发表的研究中渗透和外渗的频率,以及从中线导管发生渗透和外渗的病例报告。它还研究了许多需要循证决策的临床问题,以确定最合适的血管通路装置类型。在使用中线导管进行了 30 多年的临床实践之后,并且似乎有大量的研究,关于通过中线导管输注刺激性和刺激性药物的问题仍然缺乏足够的证据。由于尖端位置缺乏共识、临床结果的证据不足以及患者安全的重要性,应避免通过中线导管连续输注刺激性药物、所有肠外营养配方以及 pH 值和渗透压极端的输注液。