TMCnet News
Report by Johns Hopkins Cancer Center Suggests Neutral IV Connector is SafestWASHINGTON --(Business Wire)-- Research on different types of IV connectors led a Johns Hopkins cancer center to pilot a "neutral pressure" IV connector, according to a scientific presentation at the annual meeting of the Oncology Nursing Society (ONS). Since the Hopkins poster was presented at the ONS meeting, The Johns Hopkins Hospital has adopted the IV connector hospital-wide. In a four-month test, RyMed's InVision-Plus® neutral connector reduced potentially deadly catheter-related bloodstream infections (CRBSIs) by 33.3% at the Johns Hopkins center. Preventing CRBSIs is a major medical concern because U.S. patients suffer approximately 250,000 such infections a year. These often deadly infections have a mortality rate of 12% to 25% and cost an average of $56,000 to treat, according to the CDC. According to the ONS presentation, a systematic literature review, conducted by the Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at The Johns Hopkins Hospital, revealed that a neutral pressure IV connector can provide more protection against bloodstream infections than other connector types. This review led the center to trial and then adopt the InVision-Plus® connector, (which RyMed calls its "zero fluid displacement" connector to distinguish it from other "neutral" connectors). Clinicians decided this specific connector is better designed for infection prevention han other IV connectors, including others known as neutral, negative-pressure and positive-pressure. Positive-pressure connectors are already the subject of an FDA inquiry. Researchers have identified several design elements common to positive and negative connectors that are associated with higher rates of CRBSIs. These include:
Hopkins researchers found RyMed's InVision-Plus® to have a straight fluid pathway, and minimal priming volume and dead spaces as compared to other connectors. In addition, the InVision-Plus® has no moving parts in its fluid pathway and does not require a specific clamping sequence, because there is no backflow of blood into the connector's interior. Two additional advantages of the connector emerged in the study:
The poster's authors were Marie Swisher, MSN, RN, AOCNS®, MiKaela Olsen, MS,RN, AOCNS®, and Kelly Weaver MSNc, RN. The ONS 38th Annual Congress was held April 25-28 in Washington, D.C. For more information, access www.rymedtech.com. |

