Chemotherapy Extravasation: Establishing a National Benchmark for Incidence Among Cancer Centers
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
2017
Abstract
Background: Given the high-risk nature and nurse sensitivity of chemotherapy infusion and extravasation prevention, as well as the absence of an industry benchmark, a group of nurses studied oncology-specific nursing-sensitive indicators.
Objectives: The purpose was to establish a benchmark for the incidence of chemotherapy extravasation with vesicants, irritants, and irritants with vesicant potential. .
Methods: Infusions with actual or suspected extravasations of vesicant and irritant chemotherapies were evaluated. Extravasation events were reviewed by type of agent, occurrence by drug category, route of administration, level of harm, follow-up, and patient referrals to surgical consultation. .
Findings: A total of 739,812 infusions were evaluated, with 673 extravasation events identified. Incidence for all extravasation events was 0.09%.
DOI
10.1188/17.CJON.438-445
PMID
28738039
Recommended Citation
Jackson-Rose, J., Del Monte, J., Groman, A., Dial, L.S., Atwell, L., Graham, J., . . . Rice, R.D. (2017). Chemotherapy extravasation: Establishing a national benchmark for incidence among cancer centers. Clinical Journal of Oncology Nursing, 21(4), 438-445. doi:10.1188/17.CJON.438-445
Publication
Clinical Journal of Oncology Nursing
Volume
21
Issue
4
Place of Publication
Pittsburgh PA
Publisher
Oncology Nursing Society
Pages
438-445