Most IV draws waste 2× the line’s dead space, which lands near 3–5 mL for many adult setups, then you collect tubes without saline or heparin carryover.
Pulling labs from an IV can spare a needle stick. It can also wreck results if the first pull is diluted by saline, tainted by heparin, or mixed with a drug that was just infusing. The fix is the waste (discard) volume: a small amount drawn first to clear the tubing before you fill your tubes.
You’ll get a simple way to choose that volume, plus the few situations where “always waste 5 mL” can be too much or not enough.
What waste blood clears
The first liquid sitting in the catheter and attached tubing is rarely pure venous blood. It may be saline from a flush, IV fluids, a heparin lock, or medication residue. If that liquid reaches the tube, you can see odd electrolytes, skewed drug levels, or misleading coagulation results.
Lab medicine guidance commonly ties the waste volume to dead space (also called purge volume): the internal volume of the catheter, needleless connector, and extension set. A widely cited rule is to discard twice the dead space for routine testing. A controlled study found that discarding 2× dead space produced clinically accurate results while limiting unnecessary blood loss. PubMed: discard volume of twice the dead space
How Much Blood To Waste When Drawing From An IV? For Common Setups
Many adult peripheral IV setups have dead space under 2 mL. Two times that is under 4 mL, which is why you’ll see common adult waste volumes cluster around 3–5 mL in practice. Fixed numbers are easy to teach, yet the line attached to your patient may not match the “average” setup.
If you want a policy-style reference point, the Association for Diagnostics & Laboratory Medicine summarizes CLSI guidance: discard two times the catheter dead space for non-coagulation testing, with larger waste amounts used when coagulation testing is drawn from a line exposed to anticoagulants. ADLM: collecting blood from vascular lines
Step-by-step method to pick a discard volume
Step 1: Check what was running through that lumen
Look for IV fluids, heparin locks, lipid emulsions, parenteral nutrition, and meds with narrow therapeutic ranges. If the sampled lumen was used for the same drug you’re measuring, pick another site or another lumen when you can.
Step 2: Pause the infusion when allowed
Clamp or pause the infusion on the sampled lumen per your unit policy. If a drug must keep running, note it in the chart. Expect the lab or clinician to question the result.
Step 3: Flush when your protocol calls for it
Some protocols flush first, then wait a short moment, then pull waste. Others skip a pre-flush and go straight to waste. Follow your facility policy and device instructions.
Step 4: Estimate dead space, then double it
Dead space comes from the catheter, the needleless connector, and any extension set. Manufacturers list priming volumes in product specs. Add the volumes, then double the total for a routine discard target.
- Short saline lock, no extension: dead space is commonly under 1 mL.
- Saline lock plus extension set: dead space often rises to 1–2 mL or more.
- PICC or central line lumen: dead space is higher with longer lumens and added tubing.
Step 5: Use a larger discard for coag tests after heparin exposure
Coagulation studies can shift with small heparin carryover. Many lab collection procedures use a larger waste when a line may contain heparin. One coagulation specimen guide advises flushing, then discarding the first 5 mL of blood or six times the dead space volume before filling coagulation tubes. Vitalant: coagulation specimen collection
Infusion nursing standards also describe withdrawing and discarding several milliliters as part of blood sampling technique. INS: 2024 infusion standards update (PDF)
Step 6: Collect tubes in your lab’s order
Once waste is drawn, fill tubes in your lab’s order of draw, mix tubes the right way, and label at the bedside. Many redraws come from tube handling, not the discard step.
Discard targets by situation
Use this table to connect the dead space idea to real scenarios. Facility policy still rules when it’s stricter than this.
| IV draw situation | Discard target | Main reason |
|---|---|---|
| Peripheral saline lock, no extension | 2× dead space (often under 3 mL) | Clears saline from the catheter and connector |
| Peripheral saline lock with extension set | 2× dead space (commonly 3–5 mL) | Extra tubing raises internal volume |
| PIV with IV fluids paused and clamped | 2× dead space | Removes residual IV fluid from the line |
| PIV used for recent medication push | Different lumen or venipuncture | Drug residue can skew levels and electrolytes |
| PICC or central line for routine chemistry | 2× dead space or fixed adult discard per policy | Longer lumen volume varies across devices |
| Central line with heparin lock, coag tests | Max(5 mL, 6× dead space) | Limits heparin carryover into coag tubes |
| Arterial line with pressurized flush | Follow arterial line sampling protocol | Closed systems may allow return of cleared blood |
| Low-weight or frequent-lab patients | Dead-space based, smallest volume that clears | Limits cumulative diagnostic blood loss |
Dead space math in plain terms
Think of the line as a tiny measuring cup. Whatever volume it holds must be cleared before clean blood reaches your collection tube.
Quick way to map your unit’s common setups
Pick the top three IV configurations used on your floor. Pull product spec sheets for the catheter, connector, and extension set. Add the priming volumes. Post the totals where staff prep draw supplies. That single step can cut waste without changing technique.
Why doubling dead space is used
Fluid in the line blends with blood at the boundary as you aspirate. Doubling dead space clears that mixed zone for routine chemistry and hematology in most settings. Coagulation testing is the outlier when heparin is part of the picture, which is why many labs call for larger waste volumes there.
When fixed discard volumes miss the mark
When the discard is bigger than it needs to be
A 5 mL waste can be fine for central lines. On a short peripheral setup, it can remove more blood than needed. Over repeated daily labs, that extra loss adds up, especially in older adults, ICU patients, and people with baseline anemia.
When the discard is too small
If you have long extension tubing, a larger bore catheter, or a central line with added add-ons, a small fixed waste can leave saline or heparin in the line. The result is a redraw or a phone call from the lab.
Cases where an IV draw is a poor choice
Some tests and scenarios are less forgiving. If blood cultures are needed, many facilities prefer fresh venipuncture to cut contamination risk. If a line is suspected as an infection source, drawing through that line can confuse interpretation. When the only available lumen is running vasopressors or high-alert infusions, pausing may be unsafe, so a different site is safer for both patient and lab quality.
If you see repeated hemolysis from an IV draw, check technique before you increase discard. Pulling too hard with a small syringe, drawing through a tight connector, or using a kinked extension set can shear cells. A smoother, slower aspiration and a straight line path often fixes the problem.
Ways to limit blood loss without risking the result
Waste volume is one part of total phlebotomy loss. These habits help cut the total without turning the draw into a guessing game.
Use the smallest tube size that meets the lab minimum
Many labs accept lower-volume tubes for selected tests. If you run frequent labs on fragile patients, ask your lab what tube sizes meet the minimum fill for each assay.
Batch labs when timing allows it
Fewer separate draws means fewer separate waste pulls. Coordinate morning labs and timed meds when it fits the patient’s plan.
Choose closed systems when they’re already part of your setup
Some arterial sampling systems clear the line into a reservoir, then return the cleared blood to the patient. Use only approved devices and steps. Never return blood that sat in an open syringe.
Table-ready discard examples using dead space
These examples show the calculation pattern. Replace the numbers with your product specs.
| Setup (catheter + add-ons) | Dead space total (mL) | Routine discard target |
|---|---|---|
| Short PIV + needleless connector | 0.8 | 1.6 mL (2× dead space) |
| PIV + connector + short extension | 1.5 | 3.0 mL (2× dead space) |
| PIV + connector + long extension | 2.2 | 4.4 mL (2× dead space) |
| PICC single lumen + connector | 2.0 | 4.0 mL (2× dead space) |
| CVC lumen + connector + extension | 2.8 | 5.6 mL (2× dead space) |
| Coag tests after heparin lock | Use your dead space value | Max(5 mL, 6× dead space) |
Practical checklist for a clean IV draw
- Confirm what ran through the sampled lumen in the last hour.
- Pause or clamp the lumen per policy when it’s allowed.
- Flush when your protocol calls for it.
- Pull and discard 2× dead space for routine tests.
- Use the larger coag discard rule when heparin exposure is likely.
- Fill tubes in order, mix gently, label at the bedside.
- Restart infusions and chart what you did.
The goal is simple: waste just enough blood to clear the line for the test you need, using the tubing actually attached to the patient. That protects lab quality and helps limit avoidable blood loss over repeated draws.
References & Sources
- National Library of Medicine (PubMed).“A discard volume of twice the deadspace ensures clinically accurate results.”Gives evidence for using a discard volume set at 2× catheter dead space for reliable results with less blood loss.
- Association for Diagnostics & Laboratory Medicine (ADLM).“Collecting Blood from Patients with Vascular Lines.”Summarizes CLSI discard guidance for routine tests and larger discard guidance for coagulation tests drawn from anticoagulant-exposed lines.
- Vitalant.“Specimen Collection Procedures (Coagulation).”States discard guidance for saline locks plus a 5 mL or 6× dead space discard step for lines that may contain heparin before filling coagulation tubes.
- Infusion Nurses Society (INS).“Update: The 2024 Infusion Therapy Standards of Practice” (PDF).Notes blood sampling technique that includes withdrawing and discarding several milliliters before specimen collection.
