OBJECTIVE. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the use and complicati
on rate of tunneled femoral hemodialysis catheters placed in patients with
no remaining thoracic venous access sites.
MATERIALS AND METHODS. Over a 3-year period, 41 tunneled femoral vein cathe
ters (35 right, six left) were placed in 21 patients (15 women, six men; 21
-89 years old; mean, 52 years). Catheters ranged in length from 40 to 60 cm
. Tips were positioned immediately above the iliac bifurcation, at the mid
inferior vena cava (IVC), or at the junction of the IVC and right atrium. C
atheters were exchanged through the existing tract if the flow rate decreas
ed to less than 200 ml/min. Catheters were removed if an episode of bactere
mia did not resolve with antibiotics or if the insertion site became infect
ed.
RESULTS. Technical success of placement was 100%. The 30-, 60-, and 180-day
primary patency rates were 78%, 71%, and 55%, respectively. The 30-, 60-,
and 180-day secondary patency rates were 95%, 83%, and 61%, respectively. A
verage time of function per intervention was 61 days. Infections requiring
catheter removal occurred at a rate of 2.4 per 1000 catheter days. One epis
ode of partial IVC thrombosis occurred after a catheter infection developed
78 days after initial catheter placement. No episodes of symptomatic pulmo
nary embolism occurred. Total length of follow-up was 2506 catheter days.
CONCLUSION. Femoral vein catheters require more frequent interventions than
do thoracic catheters and are more susceptible to infection. However, in p
atients with difficult central venous access, the common femoral vein may b
e successfully used for permanent tunneled hemodialysis access.