1. Impact of quality management monitoring and intervention on central venous catheter dysfunction in the outpatient chemotherapy infusion setting.
- Author
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Bansal A, Binkert CA, Robinson MK, Shulman LN, Pellerin L, and Davison B
- Subjects
- Boston epidemiology, Female, Humans, Incidence, Infusions, Intravenous statistics & numerical data, Male, Prosthesis Failure, Ambulatory Care statistics & numerical data, Antineoplastic Agents administration & dosage, Catheterization, Central Venous statistics & numerical data, Neoplasms drug therapy, Neoplasms epidemiology, Quality Assurance, Health Care statistics & numerical data, Radiology, Interventional statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Purpose: To assess the utility of maintaining and analyzing a quality-management database while investigating a subjectively perceived increase in the incidence of tunneled catheter and port dysfunction in a cohort of oncology outpatients., Materials and Methods: All 152 patients undergoing lytic therapy (2-4 mg alteplase) of a malfunctioning indwelling central venous catheter (CVC) from January through June 2004 at a single cancer center in the United States were included in a quality-management database. Patients were categorized by time to device failure and the initial method of catheter placement (surgery vs interventional radiology). Data were analyzed after 3 months, and areas of possible improvement were identified and acted upon. Three months of follow-up data were then collected and similarly analyzed., Results: In a 6-month period, 152 patients treated for catheter malfunction received a total of 276 doses of lytic therapy. A 3-month interim analysis revealed a disproportionately high rate (34%) of early catheter malfunction (ECM; <30 days from placement). Postplacement radiographs demonstrated suboptimal catheter positioning in 67% of these patients, all of whom had surgical catheter placement. There was a 50% absolute decrease in the number of patients presenting with catheter malfunction in the period from April through June (P < .001). Evaluation of postplacement radiographs in these patients demonstrated a 50% decrease in the incidence of suboptimal positioning (P < .05)., Conclusions: Suboptimal positioning was likely responsible for some, but not all, cases of ECM. Maintenance of a quality-management database is a relatively simple intervention that can have a clear and important impact on the quality and cost of patient care.
- Published
- 2008
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