1. Enhancing Guidewire Efficacy for Transradial Access: The EAGER Randomized Controlled Trial.
- Author
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Bland AC, Meere W, Mikhail P, Chuah E, Redwood E, Ferreira D, Howden N, Perkovic A, Saunders SL, Kelty A, Kull T, Hill A, Spina R, Sarathy K, May A, Parkinson M, Ishak M, Collins N, Boyle A, William M, Jeyaprakash P, and Ford TJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Aged, Treatment Outcome, Middle Aged, Australia, Time Factors, Coronary Artery Disease therapy, Coronary Artery Disease diagnostic imaging, Risk Factors, Aged, 80 and over, Radial Artery diagnostic imaging, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention instrumentation, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention adverse effects, Coronary Angiography, Equipment Design, Cardiac Catheters, Cardiac Catheterization instrumentation, Cardiac Catheterization adverse effects, Punctures, Catheterization, Peripheral adverse effects, Catheterization, Peripheral instrumentation
- Abstract
Background: The 1.5 mm Baby J hydrophilic narrow J-tipped wire is a development of the standard 0.035" 3-mm J-tipped peripheral guidewire, designed to improve efficiency of transradial coronary procedures by safely navigating small caliber radial arteries to the aorta. There is currently a lack of evidence comparing the procedural success and safety of different peripheral guidewires used in transradial cardiac procedures. We compared the efficacy and safety of a narrow J-tipped hydrophilic 0.035" wire (intervention, Radifocus Baby J guidewire; TERUMO Co, Tokyo, Japan) versus a standard fixed-core 0.035" J wire (control)., Methods: Investigator-initiated, blinded, Australian, multicenter randomized trial in patients undergoing clinically indicated coronary angiography or percutaneous coronary intervention. Patients were randomized 1:1 to use either the control guidewire or the intervention guidewire. The primary end point (technical success) was defined as gaining aortic root access with the randomized guidewire., Results: In all, 330 patients were randomized between October 2022 and June 2023 (median age was 69 years, 36% were female, and body mass index was 29 kg/m
2 ). The primary end point was achieved more frequently in the intervention group (96% versus 84%; absolute risk reduction 12% [95% CI, 5.7-18.3]; P <0.001). Women assigned to the control wire experienced a higher failure rate compared with men (31% versus 8% in men; P <0.001). Fluoroscopy time was significantly lower in the Baby J group (median, 344 versus 491 seconds; P =0.024). The main mechanisms of failure using the control wire were radial artery spasm (15/26; 57%) and subclavian tortuosity (5/26; 19.2%). There were no differences in overall procedure times, major adverse cardiovascular events, or vascular complications between guidewires., Conclusions: A narrow 1.5 mm J-tipped hydrophilic guidewire resulted in greater technical success and reduced fluoroscopy time compared with the standard 3-mm J-tipped nonhydrophilic guidewire. The guidewire is safe and demonstrated key incremental benefits for the transradial approach, particularly in women., Registration: URL: https://www.anzctr.org.au/; Unique identifier: ACTRN12622001557729., Competing Interests: None.- Published
- 2024
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