Ultrasound-guided versus fluoroscopy-guided large-bore femoral access in PCI of complex coronary lesions: the international, multicentre, randomised ULTRACOLOR Trial
Publication date
2024-07-15
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taverne
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Transfemoral access is often used when large-bore guide catheters are required for percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) of complex coronary lesions, especially when large-bore transradial access is contraindicated. Whether the risk of access site complications for these procedures may be reduced by ultrasoundguided puncture is unclear. AIMS: We aimed to show the superiority of ultrasound-guided femoral puncture compared to fluoroscopy-guided access in large-bore complex PCI with regard to access site-related Bleeding Academic Research Consortium 2, 3 or 5 bleeding and/or vascular complications requiring intervention during hospitalisation. METHODS: The ULTRACOLOR Trial is an international, multicentre, randomised controlled trial investigating whether ultrasound-guided large-bore femoral access reduces clinically relevant access site complications compared to fluoroscopy-guided large-bore femoral access in PCI of complex coronary lesions. RESULTS: A total of 544 patients undergoing complex PCI mandating large-bore (≥7 Fr) transfemoral access were randomised at 10 European centres (median age 71; 76% male). Of these patients, 68% required PCI of a chronic total occlusion. The primary endpoint was met in 18.9% of PCI with fluoroscopy-guided access and 15.7% of PCI with ultrasound-guided access (p=0.32). First-pass puncture success was 92% for ultrasound-guided access versus 85% for fluoroscopy-guided access (p=0.02). The median time in the catheterisation laboratory was 102 minutes versus 105 minutes (p=0.43), and the major adverse cardiovascular event rate at 1 month was 4.1% for fluoroscopyguided access and 2.6% for ultrasound-guided access (p=0.32). CONCLUSIONS: As compared to fluoroscopy-guided access, the routine use of ultrasound-guided access for largebore transfemoral complex PCI did not significantly reduce clinically relevant bleeding or vascular access site complications. A significantly higher first-pass puncture success rate was demonstrated for ultrasound-guided access.
Keywords
complex PCI, CTO, large bore, ultrasound, vascular access, Taverne, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine, Journal Article
Citation
Meijers, T A, Nap, A, Aminian, A, Schmitz, T, Dens, J, Teeuwen, K, van Kuijk, J-P, van Wely, M, Bataille, Y, Kraaijeveld, A O, Roolvink, V, Dambrink, J-H E, Gosselink, A T M, Hermanides, R S, Ottervanger, J P, Tsilingiris, I, van den Buijs, D M F, van Royen, N & van Leeuwen, M A H 2024, 'Ultrasound-guided versus fluoroscopy-guided large-bore femoral access in PCI of complex coronary lesions : the international, multicentre, randomised ULTRACOLOR Trial', EuroIntervention, vol. 20, no. 14, pp. e876-e886. https://doi.org/10.4244/EIJ-D-24-00089