Purpose: A prospective randomized study was conducted over a 23-month period in an adult medical-surgical intensive care unit to determine whether triple-lumen catheters reduce the need for peripheral vascular access and whether they are associated with a higher rate of infection than single-lumen catheters.
Patients and methods: After the insertion route, internal jugular or subclavian, was selected by the physician, patients were randomized either to single-lumen or triple-lumen catheter groups. Complementary peripheral vascular access was allowed in both groups. Catheters were removed according to preestablished defined reasons: suspicion of catheter-related sepsis, uselessness of central venous access, duration of catheterization of more than 21 days, discharge from the intensive care unit, or death.
Results: Data on 129 central venous catheters were collected from 91 consecutive patients. Twenty-five of 68 patients from the single-lumen group and 1 of 61 patients from the triple-lumen group needed peripheral vascular access (p less than 0.001). Catheter-related sepsis rates, defined either by clinical signs and positive qualitative tip cultures (8.9% versus 11.5%) or by quantitative tip cultures (16.2% versus 11.5%), were identical in the single-lumen and triple-lumen groups (type II error: 8%).
Conclusion: In intensive care units, the use of triple-lumen catheters is associated with a dramatic decrease in the need for peripheral vascular access. The incidence of central venous catheter-related sepsis appears identical for single- and triple-lumen catheters.