Researchers examined 73 patients aged 65 years or older who had swallowing difficulties and required parenteral nutrition. The study compared three different strategies for placing central venous access: implanted ports, non-tunneled catheters, and peripherally inserted central catheters. This was a retrospective cohort study, meaning the team reviewed existing medical records rather than assigning patients to groups.
The analysis showed that survival rates differed significantly among the three groups, with a p-value less than 0.05. The study also looked at complications and short-term mortality as secondary outcomes. No specific safety concerns or adverse events were detailed in the provided data beyond the mention of complications as a secondary outcome.
Readers should understand that this is an early, small study with a sample size of only 73 people. Because the design was observational and retrospective, it cannot prove that one access method causes better survival than another. These findings suggest a link between access type and survival but require confirmation through larger, prospective trials before changing clinical practice.