The natural history of asymptomatic central venous catheter–related thrombosis in critically ill children

Author:

Jones Sophie1234,Butt Warwick15,Monagle Paul123,Cain Timothy6,Newall Fiona12347

Affiliation:

1. Department of Paediatrics, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia;

2. Haematology Research Group, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Melbourne, VIC, Australia;

3. Department of Clinical Haematology, The Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne, VIC, Australia;

4. Department of Nursing, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia; and

5. Paediatric Intensive Care Unit,

6. Medical Imaging Department, and

7. Department of Nursing Research, The Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne, VIC, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Asymptomatic central venous catheter (CVC)–related thrombosis in children varies in incidence from 5% to 69%. The rate of acute and long-term complications, such as postthrombotic syndrome (PTS), from asymptomatic CVC-related thrombosis is unknown. This article reports the outcomes of a prospective study of 189 children in pediatric intensive care that aimed to determine the frequency of asymptomatic CVC-related thrombosis during hospital admission, and the incidence of residual CVC-related thrombosis and clinically significant PTS 2 years later. Risk factors associated with CVC-related thrombosis were also identified. This study is distinct from previous work as children identified to have asymptomatic CVC-related thrombosis were not treated (clinical team kept blinded) and the entire cohort was followed for 2 years to determine the natural history of asymptomatic thrombosis. Ultrasounds of 146 children determined a 21.9% incidence of acute CVC-related thrombosis. Two children were symptomatic. No radiological thrombosis extension or clinical embolization occurred in the 126 children assessed at follow-up. Using 2 recognized PTS scales, clinically significant PTS was reported in 2 children (1 symptomatic, 1 asymptomatic CVC-related thrombosis), however, neither had functional impairment. Cardiac arrest was a risk factor for CVC-related thrombosis during admission and femoral CVC placement was predictive of residual thrombosis 2 years later. This study challenges the notion that critically ill children with asymptomatic CVC-related thrombosis require anticoagulant treatment, as the results demonstrate that the incidence of acute or long-term complications is low. A larger confirmatory study of nontreatment of CVC-related thrombosis in critically ill children is justified.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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