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7% sodium citrate (with benzyl alcohol) as catheter lock: Dedication or obsession?

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The standard heparin lock for dialysis catheters in US dialysis units is 1000 units/ml, though its use has significant limitations and problems. The alternative catheter lock of 4% sodium citrate is… Click to show full abstract

The standard heparin lock for dialysis catheters in US dialysis units is 1000 units/ml, though its use has significant limitations and problems. The alternative catheter lock of 4% sodium citrate is used in some patients, but a 7% solution would maintain catheter patency better than the 4% concentration. In spite of the failure of two prior catheter locks to become widely used in the US (highly concentrated citrate and Zuragen™), Ash Access worked with a compounding pharmacy to produce 7% sodium citrate with preservative in single-patient use frangible vials, at a reasonable cost to users. The product had early acceptance by a number of dialysis units and hospitals, but then follow-up orders were few. Where the project goes from here is unclear.

Keywords: citrate; sodium citrate; catheter; catheter lock

Journal Title: Artificial organs
Year Published: 2022

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