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Title: Insertion site of central venous catheter correlates with catheter-related infectious events in patients undergoing intensive chemotherapy. Author: Rixecker T, Lesan V, Ahlgrimm M, Thurner L, Bewarder M, Murawski N, Christofyllakis K, Altmeyer S, Bick A, Stilgenbauer S, Bittenbring JT, Kaddu-Mulindwa D. Journal: Bone Marrow Transplant; 2021 Jan; 56(1):195-201. PubMed ID: 32704092. Abstract: Patients undergoing intensive chemotherapy are usually in need for central venous catheters (CVC). Due to contradictory study results, relation of insertion site and CVC-associated complication rate in these patients is not clear. We therefore retrospectively analyzed CVC-related data of all patients undergoing intensive chemotherapy with high risk of febrile neutropenia according to NCCN criteria, who received a CVC at our bone marrow transplantation unit between May 2016 and December 2019. In total, 210 patients received 281 CVC. CVC were placed via either the subclavian-vein (SCV, n = 58; 20%) or the internal-jugular-vein (IJV, n = 223; 80%). Median duration of CVC-lifetime and neutropenic days per CVC were comparable between the two groups (IJV vs SCV: 23 days vs 21 days (p = 0.16) and 12 days vs 11 days (p = 0.65)). Both, time to CVC removal due to local inflammation and time to central line-associated bloodstream infection was significantly shorter in patients with SCV catheters (p = 0.013 and p = 0.045). CVC placed in the IJV were associated with significantly less catheter-related infectious events compared with CVC placed in the SCV. This difference was consistent across different subgroups including 88 patients undergoing allogeneic stem cell transplantation.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]