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Comparing Peripherally Inserted Central Catheters to Long Peripheral Catheters in Pediatrics (ComPLET)

Medical College of Wisconsin logo

Medical College of Wisconsin

Status

Completed

Conditions

Vascular Access Device Complications

Treatments

Device: Midline Catheter
Device: Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05346406
MCW2022

Details and patient eligibility

About

Peripherally Inserted Central Catheters (PICCs) are frequently used in hospitalized children who require prolonged vascular access; however, concerns regarding their inappropriate use and contribution to serious complications such as central line associated blood stream infection (CLABSI) and venous thromboembolism (VTE) have triggered exploration of safer alternatives. Long Peripheral Catheters (LPCs) have been recently adopted by some institutions due to fewer complications as compared to PICCs. The investigators hypothesize that LPCs could be safer alternatives to PICCs for medium-term vascular access (5-14 days) in the appropriate cohort of hospitalized pediatric patients. The primary objective of the proposed clinical effectiveness pilot trial is to test the feasibility of a full-scale effectiveness trial comparing PICCs to LPCs in hospitalized pediatric patients. The investigators aim to identify a population in which LPCs are safe and effective alternatives to PICCs for medium-term, non-central vascular access; data that will inform the design of a full-scale effectiveness study. The investigators plan to engage patients and families as advisors in vascular access device selection by understanding their experience with vascular access device placement and maintenance. Over time, use of LPCs should result in decreased inappropriate PICC utilization with a concomitant decrease in serious complications such as CLABSI and VTE.

Full description

Hospitalized children frequently require a vascular access device (VAD) for delivery of life saving interventions such as intravenous fluids and antibiotics. Peripherally Inserted Central Catheters (PICCs) are central VADs frequently used in hospitalized children for prolonged vascular access, or to administer solutions not compatible with peripheral infusion. However, PICC related complications such as venous thromboembolism (VTE) and central line associated blood stream infections (CLABSI) have triggered exploration of safer alternatives. Long Peripheral Catheters (LPCs) are peripheral VADs recently adopted for medium-term vascular access (5-14 days) and peripherally compatible infusate, due to potential for fewer complications compared to PICCs. However, there is a scarcity of literature on the effective and safe use of LPCs in pediatrics. To reduce the use of PICCs when central venous access is not required (i.e., infusate is peripherally compatible), feasible alternatives for vascular access need to be identified and tested. Until clinicians and other stakeholders are given effective alternatives for durable vascular access and evidence-based tools for VAD selection, central VAD related complications will remain a critical concern, placing children at risk for harm and increasing healthcare costs.

The overall objective of this application is to test the feasibility of a full-scale effectiveness trial comparing PICCs to LPCs and identify a population in which a LPC would be a safe and effective alternative to a PICC. In a prior study, our group showed that as many as 139 PICCs over a one-year period were placed at our local institution in children that (1) did not require central venous access for administration of peripherally incompatible infusate, (2) had the VAD in for < 14 days, and (3) did not discharge home with the VAD, but because of PICC placement for vascular access these children were at risk for CLABSI and VTE. The pediatric population satisfying the above conditions is the target of our pilot trial. A LPC program was introduced at our local institution in 2019 with initiation in the intensive care units and plans to expand the program to the whole hospital by the fall of 2021. In our initial group of 20 successfully placed LPCs, there were no severe complications (VTE and CLABSI).

The aims of this pilot, randomized controlled trial are:

Aim 1: To assess the feasibility of a full-scale effectiveness trial comparing PICCs to LPCs in hospitalized pediatric patients in need of non-central, medium-term vascular access (5-14 days anticipated need).

Hypothesis: Feasibility of a full-scale effectiveness trial will be established by demonstrating that > 70% of eligible patients agree to enrollment and randomization, > 80% of randomized patients receive the assigned intervention, > 80% of providers involved find the study acceptable, and < 5% of data are missing.

Aim 2: To identify a population in which a LPC is a safe and effective alternative to a PICC for vascular access in hospitalized pediatric patients age > 2 years, in need of non-central, medium-term access.

Hypothesis: LPCs are non-inferior to PICCs for delivery of peripherally compatible infusate needed for 5-14 days in hospitalized pediatric patients. The investigators plan to determine the time-to-removal of the VAD, both secondary to completion of therapy and secondary to complications. Safety will be assessed by measuring complication rate (e.g., VTE, CLABSI, occlusion, dislodgement, phlebitis).

Aim 3: To engage patients and families as advisors in vascular access device selection.

The investigators will describe the patient and family experience with device placement and maintenance as well as perceived patient and parent insertion-related and sedation-related distress. Mixed methods (quantitative and qualitative analysis) will be used for this aim.

The results of this study will guide the design of a full-scale effectiveness clinical trial comparing PICCs and LPCs in pediatric patients that require medium-term, non-central venous access. The investigators will identify patient characteristics and clinical situations in which LPCs are safe and effective alternatives to PICCs, allowing us to take the next step to reduce PICC use and the associated complications. The family and patient experience with VADs will add essential information that will guide device selection and future research on patient-centered outcomes. Our work will add to ongoing efforts to improve health care quality and safety in pediatrics.

Enrollment

35 patients

Sex

All

Ages

2 to 17 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • patients age 2 to 17 years admitted to Children's Wisconsin and requesting placement of a PICC for:

    1. anticipated length of intravenous treatment of 5-14 days AND
    2. peripherally compatible infusate AND
    3. VAD not needed at discharge

Exclusion criteria

  • non-English-speaking family
  • active bacteremia or VTE at site where device would be placed
  • urgent need of vascular access (within 4 hours)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

35 participants in 4 patient groups

Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter, Randomized (PICC R)
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Device: Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter
Midline Catheter, Randomized (MC R)
Experimental group
Description:
Also known as long peripheral catheter (LPC)
Treatment:
Device: Midline Catheter
Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter, Non-randomized (PICC NR)
No Intervention group
Description:
Observational only arm
Midline Catheter, Non-Randomized (MC NR)
No Intervention group
Description:
Observational only arm

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Alina Burek

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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