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Dr. Todd Ponsky

Pediatric Surgery · View profile →

Management of Retained Central Venous Catheters

Video Published 2019-04-11 Updated 2024-02-10

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Topic Overview

This presentation reviews management options for retained or fractured central venous catheter fragments, which occur in 0.2-2% of removals. Evidence suggests silastic catheters may reduce retention risk in long-term chemotherapy patients, and leaving retained fragments in situ appears safe based on available follow-up data.

Key Takeaways

  • Catheter retention occurs in 0.2-2% of removals; risk factors include chemotherapy use, indwelling >18 months, and polyurethane material.
  • Consider silastic over polyurethane catheters for long-term chemotherapy access to reduce fracture risk during removal.
  • Surgical or IR retrieval carries bleeding/embolization risks; observational studies show no complications from retained fragments up to 5 years.
  • Leaving retained catheter fragments in situ appears safe based on available evidence, though long-term data remain limited.
  • Retrieval vs observation is 'dealer's choice'—weigh intervention risks against theoretical concerns of retained foreign body.

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