Central venous access devices are routinely used in oncology for delivering chemotherapy. However, intracardiac and pericardial foreign bodies are rare complication. Immediate removal of foreign body is essential for prevention of catastrophic complications. Herein we experienced three cases of patients, two of them who suffered from fractured chemoport catheters migrated to intracardiac space, rest of them who went through longlasting assymptomatic period and incidently found to have fractured chemoport catheter in pericardium. Patient A (66-year old man with NSCLC) and B (68-year old man with NSCLC) experienced chemoport chather fracture and embolization to intra-cardiac chamber with no significant symptoms. With goose-neck snare technique (AMPLATZ, 4.0 Fr,EV3 Inc.4600 Nathan Lane North Plymouth, MN USA) under fluoroscopy, their fragmented catheters easily were removed with no eventful complications. But in patient C (69-year old man with rectal cancer), percutaneous intracatheter removal procedure under fluoroscopy was failed due to unaccessability. Chest CT, echocardiography and 3D cardiac CT reveals fragmented chemoport catheter was located in pericardial space. Also, it was romoved by pericardiotomy without complications.