Ultrasound-guided vascular access and modified postprocedural care reduced vascular complications from 9% to 4% and major complications from 3% to 1% after EP procedures.
Does ultrasound-guided vascular access and modified post-interventional care reduce vascular complications in patients undergoing electrophysiological procedures?
1,501 patients (1,672 procedures) undergoing interventional electrophysiological (EP) procedures, median age 65, 38% female.
Ultrasound-guided access, figure-of-8 suture, a 2-h pressure bandage, and 6 h total bed rest
Conventional access with an 8-h pressure bandage and bed rest
Total vascular complication rate (including minor complications like hematoma, bleeding, AV fistula, or pseudoaneurysm not requiring intervention, and major complications necessitating intervention or retroperitoneal hematoma)safety
Implementing ultrasound-guided vascular access with a figure-of-8 suture and reduced bed rest significantly decreases vascular complications after electrophysiological procedures.
ABSTRACT Background Vascular access and postprocedural access site management remain the leading causes for postprocedural complications following interventional electrophysiological (EP) procedures. Method Patients were consecutively included in a prospective registry (TRUST, NCT05521451). Two vascular access and groin‐site management protocols that changed as an institutional standard at a cut‐off date (August 15, 2022) were compared. Group I used conventional access with an 8‐h pressure bandage and bed rest. Group II utilized ultrasound‐guided access, figure‐of‐8 suture, a 2‐h pressure bandage, and 6 h total bed rest. Minor complications included hematoma, bleeding, AV fistula, or pseudoaneurysm not requiring intervention. Major complications involved any incident necessitating intervention (transfusion, surgery, interventional therapy) or retroperitoneal hematoma. Results A total of 1672 procedures in 1501 patients (median age 65 (IQR 56.74) years, 38% female) were analyzed. Clinical features were balanced with the exception of a higher body mass index (median 27 24;31 vs. 26 24;30, p = 0.011) and more frequent arterial hypertension (63% vs. 56%, p = 0.003) in Group I. Total vascular complication rate was 9% (69/780 procedures) for Group I, and 4% (40/892 procedures) for Group II (OR 0.48 95% CI: 0.32–0.73, p < 0.001). Major complications occurred in 30/109 (28%) cases, of which 20/780 (3%) occurred in Group I and 10/892 (1%) in Group II (OR 0.43 95% CI: 0.18–0.97, p = 0.042). Hematomata were most frequently observed in both groups (Group I: 46/69, 67%; Group II: 30/40, 75%). Conclusion Vascular complication rates in EP‐procedures were significantly reduced by implementing a novel institutional groin‐site management standard including ultrasound‐guided vascular access and modified post‐interventional care.
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Niklas Schenker
Julius Obergassel
Charlotte Asbeck
Journal of Arrhythmia
University of Birmingham
Goethe University Frankfurt
German Centre for Cardiovascular Research
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Schenker et al. (Fri,) reported a other. Ultrasound-guided vascular access and modified postprocedural care reduced vascular complications from 9% to 4% and major complications from 3% to 1% after EP procedures.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69af23813eac3accde8a1768 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/joa3.70302