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Anaesthesia Choice for Creation of Arteriovenous Fistula (ACCess) study protocol: a randomised controlled trial comparing primary unassisted patency at 1 year of primary arteriovenous fistulae created under regional compared to local anaesthesia

Authors :
Macfarlane, Alan J.R.
Kearns, Rachel J.
Clancy, Marc James
Kingsmore, David
Stevenson, Karen
Jackson, Andrew
Mark, Patrick
Aitken, Margaret
Moonesinghe, Ramani
Vindrola-Padros, Cecilia
Gaianu, Lucian
Pettigrew, Gavin
Motallebzadeh, Reza
Karydis, Nikolaos
Vesey, Alex
Singh, Rita
Muniraju, Thalakunte
Suttie, Stuart
McConnachie, Alex
Wetherall, Kirsty
El-Boghdadly, Kariem
Hogg, Rosemary
Thomson, Iain
Nangalia, Vishal
Aitken, Emma
Lagaac, Regin
Hogg, Rosie
Dalton, Andrew
Bell, Samira
Ross, Rose
McNair, David
Stiff, Linda
Jardine, Catherine
Dosani, Mohammed Tariq
Sainsbury, Jennifer
Sran, Kiran
Castrillo, Nadia
Gilbert, James
Sinha, Sanjay
Sutherland, Sheera
Crosbie, Sarah
Gavrila, Madita
Montgomery, Sandra
McLennan, Tina
Tarkowska, Nina
Oliver, Scott
Brown, Liz
McLachlan, Shelley
de Siqueira, Jonathan
Troxler, Max
Dewhirst, Nikki
Wright, Mark
Srinath, Chetan
Bennett, Philip
Morrow, Darren
Clancy, Marc
Deelchand, Vashist
Badhan, Rani
Sivaprakasam, Rajesh
TimEgan, Gareth Ackland
Wikner, Matt
Macfarlane, Alan
Kearns, Rachel
MacConnachie, Alex
Moonsinghe, Ramani
Vindrola, Cecilia
The ACCess collaborative group
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2021.

Abstract

Introduction: Arteriovenous fistulae (AVF) are the ‘gold standard’ vascular access for haemodialysis. Universal usage is limited, however, by a high early failure rate. Several small, single-centre studies have demonstrated better early patency rates for AVF created under regional anaesthesia (RA) compared with local anaesthesia (LA). The mechanistic hypothesis is that the sympathetic blockade associated with RA causes vasodilatation and increased blood flow through the new AVF. Despite this, considerable variation in practice exists in the UK. A high-quality, adequately powered, multicentre randomised controlled trial (RCT) is required to definitively inform practice. Methods and analysis: The Anaesthesia Choice for Creation of Arteriovenous Fistula (ACCess) study is a multicentre, observer-blinded RCT comparing primary radiocephalic/brachiocephalic AVF created under regional versus LA. The primary outcome is primary unassisted AVF patency at 1 year. Access-specific (eg, stenosis/thrombosis), patient-specific (including health-related quality of life) and safety secondary outcomes will be evaluated. Health economic analysis will also be undertaken. Ethics and dissemination: The ACCess study has been approved by the West of Scotland Research and ethics committee number 3 (20/WS/0178). Results will be published in open-access peer-reviewed journals within 12 months of completion of the trial. We will also present our findings at key national and international renal and anaesthetic meetings, and support dissemination of trial outcomes via renal patient groups. Trial registration number: ISRCTN14153938. Sponsor: NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde GN19RE456, Protocol V.1.3 (8 May 2021), REC/IRAS ID: 290482.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....69c1b1a94415519735d205bb7d9b2635