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Transfemoral Approach for Coronary Angiography and Intervention: A Collaboration of International Cardiovascular Societies. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how the transfemoral approach (TFA) is currently practiced for coronary angiography and intervention, highlighting variability in techniques among interventional cardiologists worldwide.
  • A survey conducted among 987 operators revealed that a majority preferred femoral pulse palpation for access, while fewer used imaging techniques like fluoroscopy or ultrasound, and that preferences for performing femoral angiography varied significantly.
  • The findings indicate a gap between recommended practices, like adopting imaging guidance and performing consistent femoral angiography, and what is actually being used in practice, suggesting a need for further investigation into these discrepancies.

Article Abstract

Objectives: The aim of this study was to examine the current practice and use of transfemoral approach (TFA) for coronary angiography and intervention.

Background: Wide variability exists in TFA techniques for coronary procedures.

Methods: The authors developed a survey instrument that was distributed via e-mail lists from professional societies to interventional cardiologists from 88 countries between March and December 2016.

Results: Of 987 operators, 18% were femoralists, 38% radialists, 42% both, and 2% neither. Access using femoral pulse palpation alone was preferred by 60% of operators, fluoroscopy guidance by 11%, and a combination of palpation, fluoroscopy, or ultrasound by 27%. Only 11% used micropuncture in >90% of their cases. Performing femoral angiography immediately after access was preferred by 23% and at the end of the procedure by 47%, and not done at all by 31% of operators. Hemostasis by manual compression was preferred by 50%, collagen plug vascular closure device by 31%, and suture-based vascular closure device by 11% of operators. Judkins left and right catheters were preferred for diagnostic angiography of the left (99%) and right (94%) coronary arteries. Extra backup curves (XB or EBU) were most commonly preferred for percutaneous coronary intervention of the left anterior descending (80%) and left circumflex (80%), whereas the Judkins right catheter was preferred for percutaneous coronary intervention of the right coronary artery (86%).

Conclusions: There is significant variability in preferences for femoral access technique. Even though recommended best practices advocate for fluoroscopic and ultrasound guidance, most operators use palpation alone. Femoral angiography is also not consistently used despite guideline recommendations. The lack of adoption of imaging guidance for vascular access deserves further investigation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcin.2017.08.035DOI Listing

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