International Journal of Cardiology: Heart & Vasculature (Jun 2023)

Impact of transradial versus transfemoral access for preprocedural coronary angiography on TAVR-associated complications

  • Baravan Al-Kassou,
  • Hasanin Al-Shaikh,
  • Adem Aksoy,
  • Jasmin Shamekhi,
  • Andreas Zietzer,
  • Atsushi Sugiura,
  • Verena Veulemans,
  • Matti Adam,
  • Eberhard Grube,
  • Farhad Bakhtiary,
  • Sebastian Zimmer,
  • Malte Kelm,
  • Stephan Baldus,
  • Georg Nickenig,
  • Alexander Sedaghat

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 46
p. 101205

Abstract

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Background: Vascular injury and bleeding complications remain frequent after transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). Whether the access-site of preprocedural coronary angiography (CAG) affects TAVR-related complications is not known. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of transradial (TRA) versus transfemoral access (TFA) for preprocedural CAG on outcomes in patients undergoing subsequent TAVR. Methods: The study cohort included 1002 patients undergoing transfemoral TAVR, of whom 39.4% (395/1002) had undergone radial and 60.6% (607/1002) femoral access for pre-TAVR CAG. The primary endpoint was a composite of 30-day mortality and major vascular complications after TAVR. Key secondary endpoints included VARC-3-defined complications. Results: The primary endpoint occurred less frequently in patients with prior TRA (3.3%) as compared to patients with prior TFA (6.3%, p = 0.04), which was mainly driven by significantly lower rates of major vascular complications (0.8% vs 2.5%, p = 0.05). Moreover, incidences of periprocedural access-related vascular injury and unplanned endovascular interventions were lower in TRA patients (13.2% vs 18.0%, p = 0.05). The rate of major bleeding tended to be lower in the TRA (1.5%) as compared to the TFA group (3.5%) but was not significantly different (p = 0.07). Moreover, the rate of life-threatening bleeding was comparable between both groups (0.5% vs 0.8%, p = 0.71). Conclusion: Transradial access for preprocedural CAG was associated with significantly lower rates of vascular complications following subsequent TAVR as compared to transfemoral access. However, despite the tendency to lower major bleedings with transradial access, no significant association was detectable between the access-site of coronary angiography and TAVR-related bleeding complications.

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