Transradial vs Transfemoral Access for Cerebral Angiography: A Randomized Noninferiority Clinical Trial
Wei Ni, Heng Yang, Jiabin Su, Ya Peng, Dengliang Wang, Zhiqing Lin, Jun Sun, Xuelin Chen, Jiyue Wang, Yi Li, Jiaxiong Wang, Shu Wan, Xin Ye, Qingrong Zhang, Donghai Wang, Chao Gao, Hanqiang Jiang, Xinjie Gao, Yingying Zhang, Bing Han, Jie Cao, Xucheng Zhu, Shengjun Zhou

TL;DR
A clinical trial found that transradial access is not as effective as transfemoral access for cerebral angiography, despite shorter recovery times and less pain.
Contribution
This study is the first randomized clinical trial comparing transradial and transfemoral access for diagnostic cerebral angiography.
Findings
Transradial access had a lower success rate for diagnostic cerebral angiography compared to transfemoral access.
Transradial access resulted in shorter time in bed and lower pain scores than transfemoral access.
TRA had more radial artery puncture failures compared to TFA.
Abstract
Is transradial access (TRA) noninferior to transfemoral access (TFA) in efficacy and safety for diagnostic cerebral angiography? In this randomized clinical trial including 858 patients, the success rate for accuracy in diagnostic cerebral angiography was lower in the TRA group (91%) compared with the TFA group (96%) and did not meet the prespecified noninferiority margin. TRA was not noninferior to TFA for diagnostic cerebral angiography. This randomized clinical trial compares the safety and efficacy of transradial access with that of transfemoral access for patients undergoing diagnostic cerebral angiography. Transradial access (TRA) has emerged as a promising alternative to standard transfemoral access (TFA) for interventional cardiac procedures, but its application for examination of the cerebral circulation has not been tested in a clinical trial. To compare the efficacy and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVascular Procedures and Complications · Central Venous Catheters and Hemodialysis · Peripheral Artery Disease Management
