作者
Ilias Nikolakopoulos,Taral Patel,Brian K. Jefferson,Abdul Hamid Sheikh,Wissam Jaber,Habib Samady,Jaikirshan Khatri,Robert W. Yeh,Hector Tamez,Michael Koutouzis,Ioannis Tsiafoutis,Farouc A. Jaffer,Anthony Doing,Phil Dattilo,Barry F. Uretsky,Catalin Toma,Basem Elbarouni,Khaldoon Alaswad,James J. Choi,Nicholas Lembo,Manish Parikh,Ajay J. Kirtane,Ziad A. Ali,Mohamed Omer,Evangelia Vemmou,Iosif Xenogiannis,Judit Karacsonyi,Bavana V. Rangan,Shuaib M Abdullah,Subhash Banerjee,Santiago Garcia,M. Nicholas Burke,Emmanouil S. Brilakis,Dimitri Karmpaliotis
摘要
Background The outcomes of distal radial access (dRA) in chronic total occlusion percutaneous coronary intervention (CTO-PCI) have received limited study. Methods We compared the clinical, angiographic, and procedural characteristics of 120 CTO-PCIs performed via dRA access with 2625 CTO-PCIs performed via proximal radial access (pRA) in a large, multicenter registry. Results The dRA group had lower mean PROGRESS-CTO score than the pRA group (1.0 ± 1 vs 1.2 ± 1, respectively; P=.05), while J-CTO score (2.4 ± 1.2 vs 2.3 ± 1.3; P=.43) and PROGRESS-CTO Complications score (2.8 ± 1.8 vs 2.6 ± 1.9; P=.16) were similar in the dRA vs pRA groups, respectively. Technical success was similar in the 2 groups (90% dRA vs 86% pRA; P=.14). Concomitant use of femoral access did not alter procedural success. The incidence of major periprocedural adverse cardiac events was similar in the 2 groups (0.8% dRA vs 2.4% pRA; P=.26), whereas the incidence of tamponade requiring pericardiocentesis was lower with dRA (0% dRA vs 4.69% pRA; P Conclusions Use of dRA in CTO-PCI is associated with similar procedural success and risk of complications as compared with pRA.