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Increased radial access is not associated with worse femoral outcomes for percutaneous coronary intervention in the United Kingdom

Increased radial access is not associated with worse femoral outcomes for percutaneous coronary intervention in the United Kingdom
Increased radial access is not associated with worse femoral outcomes for percutaneous coronary intervention in the United Kingdom

BACKGROUND: The radial artery is increasingly adopted as the primary access site for cardiac catheterization because of patient preference, lower bleeding rates, cost effectiveness, and reduced risk of mortality in high-risk patient groups. Concerns have been expressed that operators/centers have become increasingly unfamiliar with transfemoral access. The aim of this study was to assess whether a change in access site practice toward transradial access nationally has led to worse outcomes in percutaneous coronary intervention procedures performed through the transfemoral access approach.

METHODS AND RESULTS: Using the British Cardiovascular Intervention Society (BCIS) database, a retrospective analysis of 235 250 transfemoral access percutaneous coronary intervention procedures was undertaken in all 92 centers in England and Wales between 2007 and 2013. Recent femoral proportion and recent femoral volume were determined, and in-hospital vascular complications and 30-day mortality were evaluated. After case-mix adjustment, no independent association was observed between 30-day mortality for cases undertaken through the transfemoral access and center femoral proportion, the risk-adjusted odds ratio for recent femoral proportion was nonsignificant (odds ratio, 0.99; 95% confidence interval, 0.97-1.02; P=0.472 per 0.1 increase in proportion), and similarly recent femoral volume (per 100 procedures) was not found to be significant (odds ratio, 1.00; 95% confidence interval, 0.98-1.01; P=0.869). The in-hospital vascular complication rate was 1.0%, and this outcome was not significantly associated with recent femoral proportion after risk-adjustment (odds ratio, 0.97; 95% confidence interval, 0.94-1.00; P=0.060 per 0.1 increase in proportion).

CONCLUSIONS: The outcome gains achieved by the national adoption of radial access are not associated with a loss of femoral proficiency, and centers should be encouraged to continue to adopt radial access as the default access site for percutaneous coronary intervention wherever possible in line with current best evidence.

Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Catheterization, Peripheral/adverse effects, Coronary Artery Disease/diagnostic imaging, Databases, Factual, Female, Femoral Artery, Humans, Linear Models, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Odds Ratio, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention/adverse effects, Practice Patterns, Physicians'/trends, Radial Artery, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, United Kingdom, Young Adult
1941-7640
Hulme, William
9bfbc023-25cf-4d34-94f3-f06eb932e312
Sperrin, Matthew
e1dd5334-ed19-48c7-b486-024fb03330ba
Kontopantelis, Evangelos
0a21ca6f-4516-45f8-80fc-b10dd7db6780
Ratib, Karim
2431e8b2-4fc1-4ad1-9aa9-708750eb6c17
Ludman, Peter
28ef305d-e09e-40a7-84b4-6ccedfb37cc8
Sirker, Alex
906f90ca-feaf-437c-8bf2-fbdaa36e80cb
Kinnaird, Tim
3cfe5aa5-eb28-4a4d-b2e4-6ea0799d85d0
Curzen, Nick
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4
Kwok, Chun Shing
000170fb-8506-4c19-9481-e56d93049fef
De Belder, Mark
f0106dad-a7dd-4c54-a47e-03ec4c5c826f
Nolan, James
1cdb1e12-958f-4b04-a730-242dd48591b1
Mamas, Mamas A
41515b72-75ff-4922-bb9f-8f9c63f9f5af
British Cardiovascular Intervention Society and the National Institute of Cardiovascular Outcomes Research
Hulme, William
9bfbc023-25cf-4d34-94f3-f06eb932e312
Sperrin, Matthew
e1dd5334-ed19-48c7-b486-024fb03330ba
Kontopantelis, Evangelos
0a21ca6f-4516-45f8-80fc-b10dd7db6780
Ratib, Karim
2431e8b2-4fc1-4ad1-9aa9-708750eb6c17
Ludman, Peter
28ef305d-e09e-40a7-84b4-6ccedfb37cc8
Sirker, Alex
906f90ca-feaf-437c-8bf2-fbdaa36e80cb
Kinnaird, Tim
3cfe5aa5-eb28-4a4d-b2e4-6ea0799d85d0
Curzen, Nick
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4
Kwok, Chun Shing
000170fb-8506-4c19-9481-e56d93049fef
De Belder, Mark
f0106dad-a7dd-4c54-a47e-03ec4c5c826f
Nolan, James
1cdb1e12-958f-4b04-a730-242dd48591b1
Mamas, Mamas A
41515b72-75ff-4922-bb9f-8f9c63f9f5af

Hulme, William, Sperrin, Matthew, Kontopantelis, Evangelos, Ratib, Karim, Ludman, Peter, Sirker, Alex, Kinnaird, Tim, Curzen, Nick, Kwok, Chun Shing, De Belder, Mark, Nolan, James and Mamas, Mamas A , British Cardiovascular Intervention Society and the National Institute of Cardiovascular Outcomes Research (2017) Increased radial access is not associated with worse femoral outcomes for percutaneous coronary intervention in the United Kingdom. Circulation. Cardiovascular interventions, 10 (2), [e004279]. (doi:10.1161/CIRCINTERVENTIONS.116.004279).

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The radial artery is increasingly adopted as the primary access site for cardiac catheterization because of patient preference, lower bleeding rates, cost effectiveness, and reduced risk of mortality in high-risk patient groups. Concerns have been expressed that operators/centers have become increasingly unfamiliar with transfemoral access. The aim of this study was to assess whether a change in access site practice toward transradial access nationally has led to worse outcomes in percutaneous coronary intervention procedures performed through the transfemoral access approach.

METHODS AND RESULTS: Using the British Cardiovascular Intervention Society (BCIS) database, a retrospective analysis of 235 250 transfemoral access percutaneous coronary intervention procedures was undertaken in all 92 centers in England and Wales between 2007 and 2013. Recent femoral proportion and recent femoral volume were determined, and in-hospital vascular complications and 30-day mortality were evaluated. After case-mix adjustment, no independent association was observed between 30-day mortality for cases undertaken through the transfemoral access and center femoral proportion, the risk-adjusted odds ratio for recent femoral proportion was nonsignificant (odds ratio, 0.99; 95% confidence interval, 0.97-1.02; P=0.472 per 0.1 increase in proportion), and similarly recent femoral volume (per 100 procedures) was not found to be significant (odds ratio, 1.00; 95% confidence interval, 0.98-1.01; P=0.869). The in-hospital vascular complication rate was 1.0%, and this outcome was not significantly associated with recent femoral proportion after risk-adjustment (odds ratio, 0.97; 95% confidence interval, 0.94-1.00; P=0.060 per 0.1 increase in proportion).

CONCLUSIONS: The outcome gains achieved by the national adoption of radial access are not associated with a loss of femoral proficiency, and centers should be encouraged to continue to adopt radial access as the default access site for percutaneous coronary intervention wherever possible in line with current best evidence.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 8 December 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 February 2017
Published date: February 2017
Keywords: Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Catheterization, Peripheral/adverse effects, Coronary Artery Disease/diagnostic imaging, Databases, Factual, Female, Femoral Artery, Humans, Linear Models, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Odds Ratio, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention/adverse effects, Practice Patterns, Physicians'/trends, Radial Artery, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, United Kingdom, Young Adult

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 436149
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/436149
ISSN: 1941-7640
PURE UUID: 03d9f021-a2fa-43a1-94ec-3b11f6006a07
ORCID for Nick Curzen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9651-7829

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Date deposited: 29 Nov 2019 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:02

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Contributors

Author: William Hulme
Author: Matthew Sperrin
Author: Evangelos Kontopantelis
Author: Karim Ratib
Author: Peter Ludman
Author: Alex Sirker
Author: Tim Kinnaird
Author: Nick Curzen ORCID iD
Author: Chun Shing Kwok
Author: Mark De Belder
Author: James Nolan
Author: Mamas A Mamas
Corporate Author: British Cardiovascular Intervention Society and the National Institute of Cardiovascular Outcomes Research

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