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A GAVeCeLT consensus on the indication, insertion, and management of central venous access devices in the critically ill

Authors :
Pinelli, Fulvio
Pittiruti, Mauro
Annetta, Maria Giuseppina
Barbani, Francesco
Bertoglio, Sergio
Biasucci, Daniele G
Bolis, Denise
Brescia, Fabrizio
Capozzoli, Giuseppe
D’Arrigo, Sonia
Deganello, Elisa
Elli, Stefano
Fabiani, Adam
Fabiani, Fabio
Gidaro, Antonio
Giustivi, Davide
Iacobone, Emanuele
La Greca, Antonio
Longo, Ferdinando
Lucchini, Alberto
Marche, Bruno
Romagnoli, Stefano
Scoppettuolo, Giancarlo
Selmi, Valentina
Vailati, Davide
Villa, Gianluca
Pepe, Gilda
Source :
The Journal of Vascular Access; 20240101, Issue: Preprints
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Central venous access devices are essential for the management of critically ill patients, but they are potentially associated with many complications, which may occur during or after insertion. Many evidence-based documents—consensus and guidelines—suggest practical recommendations for reducing catheter-related complications, but they have some limitations. Some documents are not focused on critically ill patients; other documents address only some special strategies, such as the use of ultrasound; other documents are biased by obsolete concepts, inappropriate terminology, and lack of considerations for new technologies and new methods. Thus, the Italian Group of Venous Access Devices (GAVeCeLT) has decided to offer an updated compendium of the main strategies—old and new—that should be adopted for minimizing catheter-related complications in the adult critically ill patient. The project has been planned as a consensus, rather than a guideline, since many issues in this field are relatively recent, and few high-quality randomized clinical studies are currently available, particularly in the area of indications and choice of the device. Panelists were chosen between the Italian vascular access experts who had published papers on peer-reviewed journals about this topic in the last few years. The consensus process was carried out according to the RAND/University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) Appropriateness Methodology, a modification of the Delphi method, that is, a structured process for collecting knowledge from groups of experts through a series of questionnaires. The final document has been structured as statements which answer to four major sets of questions regarding central venous access in the critically ill: (1) before insertion (seven questions), (2) during insertion (eight questions), (3) after insertion (three questions), and (4) at removal (three questions).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11297298 and 17246032
Issue :
Preprints
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
The Journal of Vascular Access
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs67071983
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/11297298241262932