Early complications of venous port catheter implantation by a cardiologist: a single centre experience

    Authors

    Keywords

    port catheter, early complications, cardiologist

    DOI

    https://doi.org/10.15836/ccar2017.376

    Full Text

    Objectives : Port catheters are central venous catheters used as therapeutic devices in oncological patients. They are used for the administration of chemotherapeutic agents, antibiotics infusion, transfusion of blood products or parenteral nutrition ( 1 ). Their insertion and their use may be associated with serious complications. Port catheters insertion is usually performed by an oncologist, a radiologists or a surgeon ( 1 ). In our institution a cardiologist implants those devices. The purpose of this study is to determine early complications of port catheter insertion by cardiologists. Patients and Methods : Data from 76 patients with hematological malignancies, who had received a venous port catheter in University Hospital Merkur between October 2013 and May 2017, were collected and analyzed. The port catheter insertion procedure was performed by two cardiologists and all procedures were done through right subclavian venous access under fluoroscopy guidance. Results : Of the 76 patients, 42 (55.2%) were females and 34 (44.7%) males. Mean age was 51 years (range 21-65 years). Total catheter stay time was 897 months and mean time of catheter use was 402 days. A total of 76 port insertion were successful. Pneumothorax was observed in 4 patients (5.2%). Malposition (catheter tip in the left subclavian vein or internal jugular vein) was observed in 3 (3.9%) patients. Pocket hematoma was observed in 3 (3.9%) patients. None of these early complications required catheter extraction. Severe arrhythmia, cardiac perforation, thrombosis, hemothorax, catheter dysfunction, pocket infection were not observed in our study. Conclusion : The implantation of port catheters is a valuable method for long term treatment hematological malignancies. The rate of early complications in our study is comparable to the published data ( 1 ). So, venous port catheters placement can be performed safely by cardiologists.

    Cardiologia Croatica
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    Early complications of venous port catheter implantation by a cardiologist: a single centre experience

    Extended Abstract
    Issue9-10
    Published
    Pages376
    PDF via DOIhttps://doi.org/10.15836/ccar2017.376
    port catheter
    early complications
    cardiologist

    Authors

    Bruno LovrekovićORCIDUniversity of Zagreb School of Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia
    Mario StipinovićORCIDUniversity Hospital Merkur, Zagreb, Croatia
    Tomislav LetilovićORCIDUniversity of Zagreb School of Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia
    Darko PočanićUniversity Hospital Merkur, Zagreb, Croatia
    Njetočka Gredelj ŠimecORCIDUniversity Hospital Merkur, Zagreb, Croatia
    Helena Jerkić*ORCIDUniversity Hospital Merkur, Zagreb, Croatia

    Full Text

    Objectives : Port catheters are central venous catheters used as therapeutic devices in oncological patients. They are used for the administration of chemotherapeutic agents, antibiotics infusion, transfusion of blood products or parenteral nutrition ( 1 ). Their insertion and their use may be associated with serious complications. Port catheters insertion is usually performed by an oncologist, a radiologists or a surgeon ( 1 ). In our institution a cardiologist implants those devices. The purpose of this study is to determine early complications of port catheter insertion by cardiologists. Patients and Methods : Data from 76 patients with hematological malignancies, who had received a venous port catheter in University Hospital Merkur between October 2013 and May 2017, were collected and analyzed. The port catheter insertion procedure was performed by two cardiologists and all procedures were done through right subclavian venous access under fluoroscopy guidance. Results : Of the 76 patients, 42 (55.2%) were females and 34 (44.7%) males. Mean age was 51 years (range 21-65 years). Total catheter stay time was 897 months and mean time of catheter use was 402 days. A total of 76 port insertion were successful. Pneumothorax was observed in 4 patients (5.2%). Malposition (catheter tip in the left subclavian vein or internal jugular vein) was observed in 3 (3.9%) patients. Pocket hematoma was observed in 3 (3.9%) patients. None of these early complications required catheter extraction. Severe arrhythmia, cardiac perforation, thrombosis, hemothorax, catheter dysfunction, pocket infection were not observed in our study. Conclusion : The implantation of port catheters is a valuable method for long term treatment hematological malignancies. The rate of early complications in our study is comparable to the published data ( 1 ). So, venous port catheters placement can be performed safely by cardiologists.