| Literature DB >> 17164020 |
Mehrnaz Hadian1, Michael R Pinsky.
Abstract
The pulmonary artery catheter (PAC) was introduced in 1971 for the assessment of heart function at the bedside. Since then it has generated much enthusiasm and controversy regarding the benefits and potential harms caused by this invasive form of hemodynamic monitoring. This review discusses all clinical studies conducted during the past 30 years, in intensive care unit settings or post mortem, on the impact of the PAC on outcomes and complications resulting from the procedure. Although most of the historical observational studies and randomized clinical trials also looked at PAC-related complications among their end-points, we opted to review the data under two main topics: the impact of PAC on clinical outcomes and cost-effectiveness, and the major complications related to the use of the PAC.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17164020 PMCID: PMC3226129 DOI: 10.1186/cc4834
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Summary of clinical studies of PAC use
| Ref. | Year | Number of cases | Study design | Clinical settings | Significant findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [41] | 1975 | 413 | Case series | Autopsy reports | TEV with PAC was 4.25 times more frequent than with central lines; impact on mortality not studied |
| [38] | 1979 | 116 | Prospective case series | Critically ill patients with shock, pulmonary edema, and hemodynamic instability postoperatively | 77% Arrhythmia without increased mortality or morbidity, 1.7% staphylococcal bacteremia, 1.7% subclavian DVT |
| [49] | 1981 | 60 | Incidence study | Critically ill patients | 48% PVC and 33% VT with one death |
| [40] | 1981 | 320 PAC in 219 patients | Prospective case series | Critically ill patients | 3% Major complications; only one death |
| [36] | 1983 | 528 PAC placements in 500 patients | Case series | All cases in one medical center | 24% Complications, with 4.4% serious ones; no deaths related to complications |
| [42] | 1983 | 36 | Prospective case series | Autopsy | 61% mural thrombosis; incidence increased with prolonged duration of catheter; no significant impact on clinical course |
| [46] | 1984 | 55 | Case series | Autopsy, patients with PAC within 1 month of death | 53% RH endocardial lesions, 7% infective endocarditis, with pulmonic valve (56%) and pulmonary artery (5%) being the most and least common sites, respectively |
| [48] | 1985 | 56 | Prospective case series | ICU patents with shock, ARDS and preoperative | 12.5% advanced ventricular arrhythmia; no treatment required |
| [37] | 1985 | 141 | Case series | Autopsy | PAC associated with higher rate of mural thrombi compared with central lines |
| [3] | 1987 | 3263 | Retrospective | Patients with acute myocardial infarction | Increased length of hospital stay associated with PAC use; no long-term benefit |
| [33] | 1988 | 88 (30/28/30) | RCT (PAC control versus supranormal DO2 versus CVP) | Preoperative high-risk surgical patients | PAC had no effect on outcome unless used to guide therapy |
| [47] | 1989 | 279 PAC | Prospective | ICU patients | 3% new RBBB |
| [14] | 1989 | 1094 (537/557) | Controlled prospective cohort | Elective coronary artery bypass graft | No significant difference in outcome between PAC and CVP groups |
| [4] | 1990 | 5841 | Retrospective, analysis of PAC registry | Patients with acute myocardial infarction | Higher in-hospital mortality in CHF patients; thought to be related to use of PAC in sicker patients |
| [17] | 1991 | 33 (16/17) | RCT (PAC versus no PAC) | Nonsignificant benefit in favor of not receiving PAC | |
| [43] | 1991 | 297 | Prospective, incidence study | Medical/surgical ICU | 22% local infection and 0.7% bacteremia; factors associated with high-risk catheter-related infection included skin colonization, IJ insertion, catheter placement >3 days and insertion in the OR |
| [28] | 1994 | 100 (50/50) | RCT (supra-normal DO2 versus normal DO2) | Severe circulatory shock without response to fluid challenge | Increase mortality in treatment group |
| [29] | 1995 | 762 (252/253/257) | RCT (control versus supranormal DO2 versus minimal SvO2) | Multicenter, high-risk surgical patients with hemorrhagic, septic ARDS and trauma | No difference in mortality, organ dysfunction, or length of stay |
| [45] | 1995 | 32442 | Retrospective chart review | OR and ICU | 0.03% PA rupture with 70% mortality rate |
| [39] | 1995 | 630 PAC placements in 118 patients | Retrospective analysis | Patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage | 13% catheter related sepsis, 2% CHF, 1.2% DVT, 1% pneumothorax; no PA rupture |
| [5] | 1996 | 2016 (1008/1008) | Prospective cohort, case matching analysis | Critically ill patients | Increased mortality, cost of care and length of ICU stay in PAC group |
| [22] | 1997 | 104 (51/53) | RCT (routine PAC versus clinically indicated PAC) | Low-risk elective abdominal vascular surgery | Routine PAC had no benefit in mortality or morbidity |
| [21] | 1998 | 120 (60/60) | RCT (PAC versus no PAC) | Surgical low-risk AAA repair | No benefit, possibly with higher intraoperative complications |
| [6] | 2000 | 10,217 | Retrospective database study | Nonoperative patients in medical and surgical ICU | Direct association of PAC use with admission in surgical ICU, white race, care given by nonintensivist, and having private insurance |
| [8] | 2001 | 4059 (221/3838) | Prospective, observational cohort | Elective major noncardiac surgery | Increase in cardiac and noncardiac events with PAC |
| [18] | 2003 | 1994 (997/997) | RCT (PAC versus no PAC) | High risk, >6-year-old surgical patients | No benefit in PAC group, higher PE in catheter group, survival rate favored non-PAC group |
| [20] | 2003 | 676 (335/341) | RCT (PAC versus no PAC) | Multicenter; shock and ARDS patients | No impact of PAC on mortality or morbidity |
| [23] | 2005 | 1041 (519/522) | RCT (PAC versus no PAC) | Multi-center, all adult ICUs | No evidence of benefit or hospital mortality, 10% complications but not fatal |
| [24] | 2005 | 433 (215/218) | RCT (PAC versus no PAC) | Multicenter, severely symptomatic CHF patients | No evidence of benefit or overall mortality, 5% complications but none fatal |
AAA, abdominal aortic aneurysm; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; CHF, congestive heart failure; CVP, central venous pressure; DO2, oxygen delivery; DVT, deep venous thrombosis; ICU, intensive care unit; IJ, internal jugular; MI, myocardial infarction; OR, operating room; PA, pulmonary artery; PAC, pulmonary artery catheter; PE, pulmonary embolism; RHC, right heart catheterization; RH, right heart; RBBB, right bundle branch block; RCT, randomized clinical trial; SvO2, mixed venous oxygen saturation; TEV, thrombotic endocardial vegetation; VT, ventricular tachycardia.