Blood sampled from existing peripheral IV cannulae yields results equivalent to venepuncture: a systematic review

Author:

Lesser Finnian D1ORCID,Lanham David A2,Davis Daniel2

Affiliation:

1. Acute Medical Unit, Conquest Hospital, Hastings, East Sussex Healthcare Trust, Saint Leonards-on-sea TN37 7RD, UK

2. MRC Unit for Lifelong Health and Ageing at UCL and Acute Medical Unit, University College London NHS Foundation Trust, London NW1 2BU, UK

Abstract

Summary Objectives To establish whether blood samples taken from used peripheral intravenous cannulae are clinically interchangeable with venepuncture. Design Systematic review. PubMed, Web of Science and Embase were searched for relevant trials. Setting Trials which compared blood samples from used peripheral intravenous cannulae to venepuncture and provided limits of agreement or data which allowed calculation of limits of agreement. Participants Seven trials with 746 participants. Blood tests included 13 commonly ordered biochemistry, haematology and blood gas measurements. Main outcome measures 95% limits of agreement. Data were pooled using inverse variance weighting and compared to a clinically acceptable range estimated by expert opinion from previous trials. Results Limits of agreement for blood samples from used peripheral intravenous cannulae were within the clinically acceptable range for sodium, chloride, urea, creatinine and haematology samples. Limits of agreement for potassium were ±0.47 mmol/L which exceeded the clinically acceptable range. Peripheral intravenous cannula samples for blood gas analysis gave limits of agreement which far exceeded the clinically acceptable range. Conclusions Blood sampling from used peripheral intravenous cannulae is a reasonable clinical practice for haematology and biochemistry samples. Potassium samples from used peripheral intravenous cannulae can be used in situations where error up to ±0.47 mmol/L is acceptable. Peripheral intravenous cannula samples should not be used for blood gas analysis.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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