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Radial versus femoral access in patients with acute coronary syndromes undergoing invasive management: a randomised multicentre trial
- Source :
- Lancet (UK), 385(9986), 2465-2476. Elsevier Ltd.
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Summary Background It is unclear whether radial compared with femoral access improves outcomes in unselected patients with acute coronary syndromes undergoing invasive management. Methods We did a randomised, multicentre, superiority trial comparing transradial against transfemoral access in patients with acute coronary syndrome with or without ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction who were about to undergo coronary angiography and percutaneous coronary intervention. Patients were randomly allocated (1:1) to radial or femoral access with a web-based system. The randomisation sequence was computer generated, blocked, and stratified by use of ticagrelor or prasugrel, type of acute coronary syndrome (ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction, troponin positive or negative, non-ST-segment elevation acute coronary syndrome), and anticipated use of immediate percutaneous coronary intervention. Outcome assessors were masked to treatment allocation. The 30-day coprimary outcomes were major adverse cardiovascular events, defined as death, myocardial infarction, or stroke, and net adverse clinical events, defined as major adverse cardiovascular events or Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) major bleeding unrelated to coronary artery bypass graft surgery. The analysis was by intention to treat. The two-sided α was prespecified at 0·025. The trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01433627. Findings We randomly assigned 8404 patients with acute coronary syndrome, with or without ST-segment elevation, to radial (4197) or femoral (4207) access for coronary angiography and percutaneous coronary intervention. 369 (8·8%) patients with radial access had major adverse cardiovascular events, compared with 429 (10·3%) patients with femoral access (rate ratio [RR] 0·85, 95% CI 0·74-0·99; p=0·0307), non-significant at α of 0·025. 410 (9·8%) patients with radial access had net adverse clinical events compared with 486 (11·7%) patients with femoral access (0·83, 95% CI 0·73-0·96; p=0·0092). The difference was driven by BARC major bleeding unrelated to coronary artery bypass graft surgery (1·6% vs 2·3%, RR 0·67, 95% CI 0·49-0·92; p=0·013) and all-cause mortality (1·6% vs 2·2%, RR 0·72, 95% CI 0·53-0·99; p=0·045). Interpretation In patients with acute coronary syndrome undergoing invasive management, radial as compared with femoral access reduces net adverse clinical events, through a reduction in major bleeding and all-cause mortality. Funding The Medicines Company and Terumo. © 2015 Elsevier Ltd.
- Subjects :
- Male
angiocardiography
procedure
Prasugrel
medicine.medical_treatment
Blood Loss, Surgical
Femoral artery
EMTREE drug terms: acetylsalicylic acid
heparin
Coronary Angiography
Peripheral
cause of death
hirulog
cardiovascular disease
Surgical
femoral acce
Medicine
treatment outcome MeSH: Acute Coronary Syndrome
Blood Loss
acute coronary syndromes
Myocardial infarction
610 Medicine & health
Stroke
catheterization
comparative study
coronary artery bypass surgery
Medicine (all)
non st segment elevation acute coronary syndrome
enoxaparin
General Medicine
femoral artery
Survival Rate
aged
myocardial infarction
female
radial artery
Treatment Outcome
priority journal
Cardiology
cerebrovascular accident
Ticagrelor
360 Social problems & social services
medicine.drug
Human
Acute Coronary Syndrome
Aged
Catheterization, Peripheral
Cause of Death
Female
Humans
Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
Femoral Artery
Radial Artery
medicine.medical_specialty
Acute coronary syndrome
vascular acce
radial acce
Article
ticagrelor
acute coronary syndrome
coronary artery bypass graft
medicine.artery
Internal medicine
adverse effect
invasive management
controlled study
Radial artery
Acute coronary syndromes
radial access, myocardial infarction
outcome assessment
clopidogrel
ST segment elevation myocardial infarction
business.industry
radial access
fondaparinux
Percutaneous coronary intervention
medicine.disease
major clinical study
mortality
Surgery
prasugrel
radial versus femoral access
multicenter study
randomized controlled trial
troponin EMTREE medical terms: acute coronary syndrome
business
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 01406736
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Lancet (UK), 385(9986), 2465-2476. Elsevier Ltd.
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7d760f2d003c8edff1faca9625924e0a