Cuffed central-venous haemodialysis catheters are emerging as an alter
native permanent haemodialysis vascular access. There is limited data
regarding the adequacy of dialysis with prolonged used of these cathet
ers. We conducted a prospective study comparing three commonly used cu
ffed central-venous haemodialysis catheters: (1) PermCath(TM), Quinton
Instrument Co, Seattle; (2) Tesio(TM), Med Comp, Inc, Harleysville PA
; (3) VasCath Soft Cell(TM), Bard Instrument Company, Toronto, and com
pared them with control patients dialysing with arteriovenous access (
AV) prolonged temporary vascular access to placement of one of three c
atheters. The control group comprised of 222 patients dialysing simult
aneously in the same units with AV access. Methods: All patients were
dialysed with identical machines and kidneys. Maximal effort were made
with every catheter to optimize achievable blood flow. Catheters with
mechanical problems were treated first with urokinase and then fibrin
sheath catheter stripping. The mean blood flow was determined by aver
aging mean blood flows from 30 consecutive treatments. Reliability of
catheter was defined as percentage of treatments that were performed a
t a median blood flow of 350 ml/min or above during these 30 treatment
s. Kt/V was measured monthly and calculated using the single-pool Daug
irdas formula. haemodialysis prescription were adjusted for Kt/V above
1.2. Recirculation was measured using two-nedle low-blood-flow techni
que. Results: The mean blood flows were (PermCath 383.6 ml/min, Tesio
396.3 ml/min, VasCath 320.4 ml/min). PermCath and Tesio had comparable
mean blood flows and were significantly higher than VasCath (P<0.005)
. Reliability of catheters were (PermCath 86.9%, Tesio 81.6%, VasCath
42.3%). Tesio and PermCath were equally reliable and both were more re
liable than VasCath (P<0.005). Had the target for reliability been 300
ml/min all three catheters would have been equally reliable. Negative
arterial pressure in excess of 300 mmHg prevented faster blood flows
in 98% of instances. None of the catheters performed as well as the co
ntrol population with AV access (mean blood flow 437 ml/min, reliabili
ty 96%, P<0.005). Recirculation rates were 3.7% for PermCath, 3.9% for
Tesio, and 4% for VasCath. All patients weighing less than 85kg achie
ved a Kt/V of 1.2 with a 4-h treatment. For comparison purposes when K
t/V was normalized to a 70 kg patient the results were PermCath 1.42,
Tesio 1.44, VasCath 1.19, AV access 1.64. Summary: All three catheters
are capable of providing adequate haemodialysis although large patien
ts will need extended treatment times. The PermCath(TM) and Tesio(TM)
provide blood flow and reliability superior to the VasCath(TM). Blood
flow is limited in all catheters by inflow, as evidenced by negative a
rterial pressure. All catheters had acceptable recirculation. AV acces
s is superior in terms of blood flow and reliability to all tested cat
heters.