Document details

Double-chamber syringe versus classic syringes for peripheral intravenous drug administration and catheter flushing: a study protocol for a randomised controlled trial

Author(s): Parreira, Pedro ; Sousa, Liliana B. ; Marques, Inês A. ; Santos-Costa, Paulo ; Braga, Luciene M. ; Cruz, Arménio ; Salgueiro-Oliveira, Anabela

Date: 2020

Persistent ID: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/90493

Origin: Estudo Geral - Universidade de Coimbra

Subject(s): Double-chamber syringe; clinical research; Effectiveness; Safety


Description

Background:The prevention of catheter-related complications is nowadays an important topic of research.Flushing catheters is considered an important clinical procedure in preventing malfunction and several complications such as phlebitis or infection. Considering the latest guidelines of the Infusion Nurses Society, theflushing should be carried out both pre- and post-drug administration, requiring different syringes (with associated overall increased times of preparation/administration of intravenous medication by nurses, and also increasing theneed for manipulation of the venous catheter).Methods/design:A multi-centre, two-arm randomised controlled trial with partially blinded outcome assessment of 146 adult patients. After eligibility analysis and informed consent, participants will receive usual intravenous administration drugs with flushing procedures, with a double-chamber syringe (arm A) or with classic syringes (armB). The outcomes assessment will be performed on a daily basis by an unblinded ward team, with the same procedures in both groups. Some main outcomes, such as phlebitis and infiltration, will also be evaluated by nurses from a blinded research team and registered once a day. Discussion:The study outlined in this protocol will provide valuable insight regarding the effectiveness and safety of this new medical device. The development of this medical device (dual-chamber syringe, for drug and flushsolution) seems to be an important step to facilitate nurses’adoption of good clinical practices in intravenous procedures, reducing catheter manipulations. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov,NCT04046770. Registered 13 August 2019.

This project was supported by the Research & Technological Development Incentive System (SI I&DT Co-Promotion; project reference POCI-01-0247-FEDER-017604).

Document Type Journal article
Language English
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