Systematic review and meta-analysis: safety of ultrasound-guided peripheral venipuncture and catheterization
Introduction
Vascular catheterization, including arterial catheterization, peripheral venous catheterization, and central venous catheterization, exerting critical role in the clinical treatment of patients with a variety of acute and critical diseases. Peripheral venipuncture catheterization involves puncturing a vein of the peripheral arm with a catheter and then directing the catheter to a large vein close to the heart to avoid direct contact between chemotherapy drugs and the vein in the arm. As the blood flows fast in the superior vena cava, the chemotherapy drugs may be quickly eliminated and the interaction of the drug with the blood vessel can be minimized (1-3). Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization is primarily suitable for long-term intravenous infusion where the condition of superficial peripheral veins is poor and it is difficult to achieve a successful puncture. Applications include repeated infusions of stimulant drugs, such as chemotherapy drugs; long-term introduction of drugs with high permeability or viscosity, such as high sugar/fat milk, amino acid; or rapid infusion using a pressure or pressurized pump, such as an infusion pump (4-6). However, peripheral venipuncture and catheterization also has its limitations. It is not suitable for patients whose physical condition can’t tolerate intravenous cannulation, such as patients with coagulation mechanism disorder or immunosuppression (7-9). Patients with a history of phlebitis, venous thrombosis, trauma, or vascular surgery at the predetermined site of venipuncture are also unsuitable, as well as those with local tissue factors affecting the stability or patency of the catheter (10).
During a peripheral venipuncture and catheterization procedure, patients are usually placed in the supine position, and the length of the patient from the puncture site to the superior vena cava is measured with a tape measure, generally 45–48 cm. After the puncture site is selected, the hemostatic band is tied, routine disinfection is performed, and the peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC) venipuncture is performed according to the instructions, with the length of catheter reserved based on actual conditions of patients. After puncture, an X-ray is taken (11). Studies have shown that peripheral venipuncture can reduce the patients’ pain due to repeated venipuncture, is simple and easy, and can be performed directly in the ward with no limitations on time or place (12,13). Since the catheter can access the superior vena cava with fast blood flow, peripheral venipuncture catheterization can quickly reduce local tissue pain, necrosis, and phlebitis due to fluid osmotic pressure or chemotherapeutic drugs (14). Patients undergoing early catheterization will almost never sustain venous injury in the course of chemotherapy, ensuring that good venous access can be maintained and that chemotherapy treatments can be completed successfully (15). Peripheral venipuncture catheterization has become a convenient, safe, fast, and effective means of providing vein access for long-term intravenous nutrition support and medication for patients with critical illness, and for patients undergoing the chemotherapy (16).
The factors that affect the success rate of puncture include the condition of the vein itself, the puncture site, the patient's condition, the puncture technique, and the way of delivery. Traditional blind puncture cannot correctly judge the thickness of blood vessels, venous valves and branches, which leads to a low success rate of catheter placement. There are more complications. Continuous improvements in medical technology have led to the application of ultrasound to vascular puncture and catheterization (17). Ultrasound-guided puncture was first proposed in 1984, and subsequent studies have demonstrated that it improves conventional puncture techniques in anesthesia and the intensive care unit (ICU) (18). In recent years, with new developments in medical instrumentation, reports on real-time 2-dimensional ultrasound (RTUS) guidance techniques have been increasing, and a growing number of studies have confirmed the advantages of deep venipuncture catheterization using RTUS (19). Ultrasound-guided PICC catheter placement can significantly increase the success rate of catheter placement and improve the incidence of mechanical phlebitis, bleeding at the puncture site, and finger swelling.
The current ultrasound-guided peripheral venipuncture research mainly focuses on adult tumor chemotherapy patients, and there are relatively few studies on children. This study was to explore the safety of ultrasound-guided peripheral venous catheterization. Eight articles were obtained finally with various screening and meta-analyses methods. It could provide a theoretical scientific basis for improving the success rate and reducing the incidence of dangerous events in ultrasound-guided peripheral venipuncture and catheterization.
We present the following article in accordance with the PRISMA reporting checklist (available at https://dx.doi.org/10.21037/apm-21-3163).
Methods
Search strategy
PubMed, MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, were searched for a combination of related keywords and medical subject title terms for postoperative pulmonary complications. Search restrictions limited results to studies published from January 1 2001, to March 20, 2021. The start date was chosen to overlap with the last system review on prevention strategies. Search keywords and terms included the following: peripheral venipuncture, ultrasound guidance, arterial injury rate, hematoma formation rate, pneumothorax incidence rate, and hemothorax incidence rate. The full text of articles was obtained to allow manual screening in accordance with predetermined criteria for inclusion and exclusion.
How to include or exclude the articles
Articles met the following items could be included: (I) the participants were patients undergoing peripheral venipuncture and catheterization; (II) the patients had reached the age of 18 years; (III) the patients were examined in a randomized controlled trial or a study based on a clinical trial; (IV) the article contained target keywords; (V) only published articles were considered for inclusion; and (VI) relevant intervention measures included the experimental group (Exp group) being catheterized by peripheral venipuncture guided by ultrasound and the control group (Con group) being catheterized by peripheral venipuncture guided by an anatomical marker.
Articles which satisfied the below items had to be excluded: (I) articles that in essence reported findings published in earlier work; (II) articles without the required indicators, (III) nonclinical trials, (IV) studies involving other methods of venipuncture, (V) Chinese-language literature, (VI) other meta-analyses that used references rather than including literature, and (VII) fuzzy results and/or incomplete data.
Screening process
Two researchers were invited to screen the articles independently and discuss to confirm the results. If different opinions arose, other experts were consulted to refine the data selection.
Data extraction
Data were extracted from the selected articles into Microsoft Excel tables, including basic literature information (title, author, year of publication, author information, and literature sources), the general data of the participants (gender, age, study sample size, and baseline comparability), research design and method, intervention measures, outcome indicators, bias evaluation, and others. The data were extracted independently by the two researchers, and afterwards a cross-check was performed. Any differences in the tables were resolved either by discussion between the two researchers or in consultation with a third researcher.
Quality assessment
The articles were evaluated using the bias-risk assessment criteria defined by Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Intervention 5.0.2. The evaluation items were given as follows: (I) application of a random sequence (which referred to whether the research objects were randomly grouped); (II) implementation of allocation hiding (i.e., whether the participants did not know the random group); (III) whether the participants knew the research and the grouping information; (IV) blinded outcome assessor (which referred to the researcher or outcome assessor knew nothing about the participant); (V) complete data, (VI) whether the survey results could be trusted, and (VII) other biases. If any inconsistent result was obtained by the two researchers, it can be discussed to get the agreed result, or otherwise, it can be arbitrated by a third party (Table 1).
Table 1
The first author | Random method | Distribution method | Blinding of patient and investigator | Blinding of outcome evaluators | Integrity of the resulting data | Selectively reported research results | Other sources of bias |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Turker 2009; (20) | UC | UC | No | No | Complete | UC | UC |
Agarwal 2009; (21) | UC | UC | No | No | Complete | UC | UC |
Airapetian 2013; (22) | Table of random numbers | UC | No | No | Complete | UC | UC |
Bansal 2005; (23) | UC | UC | No | No | Complete | UC | UC |
Grebenik 2004; (24) | UC | UC | No | No | UC | UC | UC |
Karakitsos 2006; (25) | Table of random numbers | Sealed envelope | No | No | Complete | UC | UC |
Leung 2006; (26) | Computer randomization | Sealed envelope | No | No | Complete | UC | UC |
Milling 2005; (27) | Table of random numbers | Sealed envelope | No | No | Complete | UC | UC |
“UC” in the table above referred to “Unclear”.
Data analysis
The forest map combined Cos also clarified the articles information. No overlap shown by CI indicated statistical heterogeneity was obvious among the articles, so it had to be analyzed further to obtain the acceptable inhomogeneity using fixed effect model (FEM). It can be divided into subgroups with different designs. The influence size of each subgroup can be ignored when the heterogeneity can’t be ignored when different properties can’t be dealt with in order to deal with the heterogeneity. The combined statistical model of the statistical model was selected. Sensitivity analysis on results was completed to analyze if any article alone could affect the overall results. In general, this study can be expected to have an impact on the comprehensive study in the following two situations. First, the presumed size of the combined effect is 95% greater, and results will be significantly different when a study is deleted. If there is little difference in the results of one study affecting the whole, it indicates the sensitivity is unstable. However, sensitivity analysis showed that the findings were stable and that the conclusion was reliable.
Statistical analysis
RevMan 5.3 software provided by The Cochrane Collaboration was used for the meta-analysis. Odds ratio (OR) was undertaken as the effect size, and the outcome was represented with 95% CIs. Heterogeneity of the included studies was first tested with α=0.1 to be the test level. If heterogeneity was not found (P>0.10, I2<50%), FEM was applied for the meta-analysis among all articles. P value <0.05 was adopted to show the statistically significant difference. If there were more than 10 articles to perform the single risk factor, funnel plots were adopted to analyze the publication bias, which was drawn by RevMan 5.3. If the result showed a P value >0.05, there was no publication bias; otherwise, there was publication bias.
Results
Researched articles
A total of 3,340 articles were retrieved from the database, and 1,298 articles were retrieved from registers. After reading the article, 2,042 articles that did not meet the requirements were initially eliminated. After reading the article title and abstract, 2,014 articles that did not meet the inclusion and exclusion criteria were eliminated. After further reading the abstract, 549 articles were eliminated. After reading the full text of the article carefully and eliminating 25 documents, finally, a total of 8 documents meeting the requirements were included for meta-analysis (20-27) (Figure 1, Table 2).
Table 2
The first author | Country/region | Number of cases (Exp group/Con group) | Average age (years) | Diagnostic ultrasonic instrument | Intervention in the Exp group | Intervention in Con group | Outcome indicators |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Turker 2009; (20) | Turkey | 190/190 | 47.5 | Toshiba | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were conducted under ultrasonic guidance | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were performed under the location of anatomical markers | (I); (II); (III) |
Agarwal 2009; (21) | India | 40/40 | Unclear | SonoSite | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were conducted under ultrasonic guidance | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were performed under the location of anatomical markers | (IV) |
Airapetian 2013; (22) | French | 36/38 | 65 | Dymax | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were conducted under ultrasonic guidance | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were performed under the location of anatomical markers | (I) |
Bansal 2005; (23) | India | 30/30 | 41 | Unclear | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were conducted under ultrasonic guidance | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were performed under the location of anatomical markers | (I); (II); (III) |
Grebenik 2004; (24) | Britain | 59/65 | 37 | Baird Site Rite III | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were conducted under ultrasonic guidance | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were performed under the location of anatomical markers | (I); (II) |
Karakitsos 2006; (25) | Greek | 450/450 | 58.7 | ATL 3500 | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were conducted under ultrasonic guidance | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were performed under the location of anatomical markers | (I); (II); (IV); (V) |
Leung 2006; (26) | Australia | 65/65 | 54.5 | SonoSite | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were conducted under ultrasonic guidance | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were performed under the location of anatomical markers | (I); (II); (III); (IV) |
Milling 2005; (27) | The United States | 60/69 | 71.9 | SonoSite | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were conducted under ultrasonic guidance | Peripheral venipuncture and catheterization were performed under the location of anatomical markers | (I); (V) |
(I) Puncture failure rate; (II) arterial injury rate; (III) hematoma formation rate; (IV) incidence of pneumothorax; (V) incidence of hemothorax.
Bias risk assessment
The Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Intervention 5.0.2 was used to evaluate the risk of bias in 8 articles selected for inclusion. RevMan 5.3 was adopted to draw the results in chart (Figures 2,3).
Failure rate of peripheral venipuncture and catheterization under ultrasound guidance
Of the 8 studies included in this meta-analysis, 7 reported the incidence of puncture failure during peripheral vascular catheterization of patients. For this analysis, there were 890 patients in Exp group and 907 cases in Con group. Significant heterogeneity was found (I2=10%; P=0.35), so meta-analysis was performed using FEM. The results yielded an OR of 0.08 (95% CI: 0.04–0.16; Z=6.97; P<0.00001). Therefore, difference in the incidence of puncture failure was obvious between the two groups under different puncture methods (P<0.05; Figure 4).
The funnel plot was basically symmetrical, and most of the data corresponded to points within the 95% CI. It suggests that there was no big publication bias in the correlation of the puncture failure rate in patients with different puncture methods (Figure 5).
Meta-analysis of the vascular injury rate of peripheral venipuncture and catheterization guided by ultrasound
Of the 8 studies included in this meta-analysis, 5 reported the incidence of arterial injury during peripheral vascular puncture and catheterization. For this analysis, there were 794 and 800 patients in the Exp group and Con group, respectively. Obvious heterogeneity was found (I2=0%; P=0.98). The results using FEM yielded an OR of 0.15 (95% CI: 0.07–0.32; Z=5.01; P<0.00001). Therefore, difference in the incidence of vascular alignment was great between the two groups under different puncture methods (P<0.05; Figure 6).
The funnel plot was basically symmetrical, and most of the data corresponded to points within the 95% CI. The inverted funnel chart is basically symmetrical, and all the documents fall into the funnel. Therefore, there was no big publication bias (Figure 7).
Meta-analysis of the hematoma formation rate of peripheral venipuncture catheterization guided by ultrasound
Of the 8 studies included in this meta-analysis, 3 reported the hematoma formation rate during peripheral vascular puncture and catheterization of patients. For this analysis, 285 patients were enrolled in both the experimental and Con groups. Significant heterogeneity was shown among the articles (I2=0%; P=0.90), so FEM was selected for meta-analysis, which showed an OR of 0.24 (95% CI: 0.08–0.69; Z=2.64; P=0.008). Therefore, the difference in the hematoma formation rate was visible between the two groups using different puncture methods (P<0.05; Figure 8).
The funnel plot was essentially symmetrical, and most of the data corresponded to points within the 95% CI. And the inverted funnel chart is basically symmetrical, and all the documents fall into the funnel. Therefore, there was no obvious publication bias in the included documents (Figure 9).
Meta-analysis of the incidence of pneumothorax with peripheral venipuncture and catheterization guided by ultrasound
Of the 8 studies included in this meta-analysis, 3 reported the incidence of pneumothorax during peripheral vascular puncture and catheterization. For this analysis, there were 555 patients in both the experimental and Con groups. Heterogeneity was obvious among the articles (I2=0%; P=0.50), so meta-analysis was realized using FEM. The results yielded an OR of 0.10 (95% CI: 0.02–0.55; Z=2.66; P=0.008). Therefore, great difference was found in the incidence of pneumothorax between the two groups under different puncture methods (P<0.05; Figure 10).
The funnel plot was basically symmetrical, and most of the data corresponded to points within the 95% CI. The drawn inverted funnel graph is basically symmetrical, and all 3 documents fall into the graph. Therefore, there was no obvious publication bias in the literature (Figure 11).
Meta-analysis of the incidence of hemothorax with peripheral venipuncture and catheterization guided by ultrasound
Of the 8 studies included in this meta-analysis, 2 reported the incidence of hemothorax during peripheral vascular puncture and catheterization. For this analysis, 510 patients were rolled in the Exp group and 519 cases were in the Con group. Heterogeneity was found to be great (I2=26%; P=0.25), so a FEM was adopted. The meta-analysis results yielded on OR of 0.30 (95% CI: 0.17–0.54; Z=4.00; P<0.0001). Therefore, significant difference was found in the incidence of hemothorax between the two groups under different puncture methods (P<0.05; Figure 12).
The funnel plot was basically symmetric, and most of the data corresponded to points within the 95% CI. It shows that there was no obvious publication bias in the included literature (Figure 13).
Discussion
Traditional clinical methods for peripheral venipuncture catheterization rely on anatomical markings on the body surface, successfully locating the pulse, and subjective, manual judgment of vascular elasticity by touch. These methods are somewhat limited: they are unable to identify vascular lesions or determine the location of needle and thread injury to adjacent structures (28). In addition, if a patient is in shock or is obese and the pulse is difficult to find, then the success rate of traditional methods is greatly reduced (29). Periphlebitis can also cause difficulties with traditional puncture methods if the patient has peripheral burns, scarring, obesity, or phlebitis (30). Deep venipuncture is difficult if the patient is obese, has a stubby neck, has anatomical variation, or has limited neck movement. Critically ill patients requiring deep vein catheters more often exhibit anasarca, difficulty breathing or lying down, shock, etc. These factors can all cause difficulties in successful deep vein puncture, including difficulties in determining the puncture point, depth, and angle. This can lead to repeated blind puncture, prolonged catheterization, catheterization failure, and even death in patients (31,32). In recent years, the application of ultrasound-guided vascular puncture and catheterization has been expanded in clinical practice (33). Two-dimensional ultrasound guidance can clearly identify the relationship between arteries, veins, and surrounding structures, and accurately show the local anatomy (34). This can reduce unnecessary blood vessel and tissue damage, thus reducing complications such as accidental entry into arteries, damaged blood vessels, pneumothorax, and hemothorax (35).
Different from the ultrasound-guided arterial puncture, the superficial vein has a thin vessel wall and low blood pressure. Compared with the peripheral artery, the position is not fixed and superficial. In the process of searching for superficial veins and during venipuncture, the ultrasound probe should be placed gently on the skin surface to avoid applying pressure under the premise of ensuring close contact with the skin and good imaging. To prevent the superficial vein from deforming or closing due to the contact pressure of the ultrasound probe, which will affect the puncture effect.
Conclusions
Meta-analysis of 8 studies has shown that, as compared to conventional catheterization, ultrasound-guided peripheral venipuncture catheterization exhibits fewer complications; lower puncture failure rates; and reduced incidence of arterial injury, hematoma formation, pneumothorax, and hemothorax. Since the follow-up time of the included studies was not consistent and most of the studies had a short follow-up time, it was not possible to draw any conclusions as to the comparative long-term quality of life for patients. Furthermore, the information collected in this study may have publication bias, which would affect the reliability of this meta-analysis.
Nevertheless, ultrasound-guided peripheral venipuncture catheterization exhibits clear advantages over traditional methods. It is a noninvasive, highly efficient technique, with a high one-time puncture success rate, fewer complications, and strong operability. Its use can improve the comfort of patients and avoid additional injuries. It should therefore be employed widely in clinical practice as an effective means of providing comfortable medical treatment.
Acknowledgments
Funding: None.
Footnote
Reporting Checklist: The authors have completed the PRISMA reporting checklist. Available at https://dx.doi.org/10.21037/apm-21-3163
Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at https://dx.doi.org/10.21037/apm-21-3163). The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.
Ethical Statement: The authors are accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.
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(English Language Editors: E. Davies and J. Gray)