Ultrasound-guided femoral venous access decreases vascular complications in catheter ablation procedures.
Friederike Pavel, S C R Erlhöfer, J Wörmann, S Dittrich, C Scheurlen, K Filipovic, J-H Schipper, J-H van den Bruck, A Sultan, J Lüker, D Steven
Abstract
Open AccessUltrasound (US) guidance is increasingly used in invasive cardiac electrophysiology (EP) procedures for femoral vascular access. In this study, we assessed the occurrence of vascular access-related complications in EP procedures which were performed with the routine use of anatomical landmark (LM) versus US-guided vascular access. A total of 1119 consecutive EP procedures in 1012 patients performed in a two-year period from September 10, 2020 to September 10, 2022 were included. The endpoint of the present study consisted of any vascular access-related complication, classified as hematoma, aneurysm, or AV-fistula. Different risk factors for increased bleeding risk were analyzed. During the evaluation period, 777 procedures were performed using LM-guiding and 342 procedures using US-guided access. Overall, 19 (1.7%) relevant vascular complications occurred including: 15 (1.3%) hematoma, 2 (0.18%) aneurysm and 2 (0.18%) AV-fistula. 17 (2.2%) complications occurred in the LM-guided group and 2 (0.6%) in the US-guided group. A significant reduction of femoral complications by 89% was observed with introduction of routine US-guided access. 3.8% in the LM-group vs. 0.4% in the US-group (OR 0.1, 95% CI 0.0135-0.8515, p = 0.034). Intraprocedural ACT and the HASBLED score [range 0-4; mean = 1.47; maximum = 4) were shown to be independent predictors for vascular complications (OR 2.826, 95% CI 1.631-4.895, p < 0.001). The use of US-guided vascular access significantly decreased the access-related complication rate in EP procedures. Higher procedural ACT and HASBLED score independently predicted a higher risk of vascular access complications.