Actively Recruiting
Central Vein Stenosis Due to Dialysis Catheter Insertion in Subclavian Compared to Jugular Vein
Led by Skane University Hospital · Updated on 2026-04-29
100
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
267 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Central vein stenosis (CVS) is a well-known complication of central venous catheterization, especially after insertion of temporary hemodialysis catheters (tHDC). Incidence and prevalence differ between studies, and exact figures are hard to tell since proper venographies seldom are performed unless the patient is symptomatic. Most tHDC are placed in the jugular or femoral veins as catheters in the subclavian veins have been shown to result in CVS to a greater degree. However, some studies are equivocal and there are several advantages with the subclavian vein such as a lower risk for infectious and thrombotic complications, longer durability (thereby avoiding placement of a new catheter with repeated tissue trauma), increased comfort during insertion and use, less effect on blood flow if the patient moves the head, easier to mobilize. The studies on CVS incidence originate from the 1990s when ultrasound-guided insertions were unheard of and polyurethane catheters were prevalent. The investigators believe that there is less tissue trauma when using ultrasound guidance in real-time. Furthermore, CVS is less common when silicone catheters are used instead of polyurethane catheters. To avoid unnecessary vascular trauma and patient suffering, any pre-existing CVS should ideally be detected before cannulation attempts. A CT scan of the chest with IV contrast is preferred, but this exposes the patient to ionized radiation, is time-consuming and (although debated) may cause contrast-induced nephropathy. A brief ultrasound examination to verify central venous patency would be useful provided it is shown to have an adequate sensitivity for stenosis detection.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Central Vein Stenosis Due to Dialysis Catheter Insertion in Subclavian Compared to Jugular Vein
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Adults (18 years of age or older).
- Need for a temporary central dialysis catheter with expected treatment time of at least 7 days.
- Ability to provide informed consent.
You will not qualify if you...
- Presence of an intravenous pacemaker or PICC-line in right central veins.
- Known central vein stenosis on the right side.
- Arteriovenous fistula on the right upper extremity.
- History of central venous interventions such as stents or dilatations (excluding previous catheterizations).
- Existing central venous catheter in the right internal jugular or right subclavian vein.
- Unavailability of right jugular or right subclavian vein for catheterization due to infection, thrombosis, or inability to visualize with ultrasound.
- Known allergy to iodinated contrast agents.
- Body mass index greater than 35 kg/m2.
- No study physician available for catheterization.
AI-Screening
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Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
Skånes universitetssjukhus
Lund, Sweden, 22185
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
O
Ola Borgquist, MD, PhD
CONTACT
T
Thomas Kander, MD, PhD
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
NONE
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Model
PARALLEL
Primary Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Number of Arms
2
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