Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
The PRAGMATIC Study:A Prospective Randomized Clinical Trial Comparing Radial Artery Intimal Hyperplasia Resulting From a 7F Sheathless Guide (Mach 1TM) vs. a 6F Transradial Sheath/Guide Combination in Coronary Intervention
The purpose of this study is to determine if the routine use of a sheathless 7F guide catheter for transradial percutaneous coronary intervention (TR PCI) is non-inferior to a 6F sheath/guide combination with regards to radial artery injury (radial artery intimal-medial-adventitial thickening). To evaluate the radial artery, ultrahigh resolution ultrasonography (55 mHz) will be used to accurately quantify radial artery intimal-medial-adventitial thickness (IMT) at baseline and 90 days. A non-inferiority analysis will be performed to compare the degree of radial artery IMT at 90 days between the 7F sheathless guide approach and the 6F sheath/guide combination.
The purpose of the PRAGMATIC study (A Prospective Randomized Trial comparing Radial Artery
Intimal Hyperplasia resulting from a 7F Transradial Sheathless Guide [Mach 1] vs. a 6F
Transradial Sheath/Guide Combination in Coronary Intervention) is 3 fold: (1) to determine if
the routine use of a simple inexpensive "home-made" 7F sheathless guide catheter approach for
TRA-PCI was associated with comparable degrees of radial artery access site injury and
intimal-medial thickening (IMT) as the routine use of a 6F standard sheath/guide catheter
combination; (2) to determine if the 7F sheathless approach was associated with comparable
procedural success rates, procedure times, number of guides and crossover rates to a femoral
approach compared to a 6F sheath/guide combination; and (3) to use ultrahigh resolution
ultrasound to characterize the degree of RA injury and intimal-medial hyperplasia (IMT) that
routinely occurs following transradial percutaneous coronary intervention.
Materials and Methods
Subjects and Study Design The study enrolled 41 consecutive patients undergoing elective
non-emergent TRA-PCI at Tallahassee Memorial Hospital (TMH) from June 2016 to December 2016.
The study protocol was approved by the TMH institutional review board. Informed consent was
obtained prior to diagnostic coronary arteriography. Patients aged 21 years and over who were
undergoing planned non-emergent PCI and willing to undergo a 24 hour and 90day post PCI RA
ultrasound were eligible. Patients were excluded if they had undergone a prior ipsilateral
TRA heart catheterization or PCI. There were no angiographic exclusions. Baseline clinical,
demographic and angiographic characteristics were collected prospectively. Patients were
randomly assigned to undergo TRA-PCI using a 7F sheathless Mach 1TM (Boston Scientific,
Marlborough, MA) guide catheter or using our catheterization lab's standard 6F CordisTM
(Johnson and Johnson, Inc.) sheath/6F Mach1TM guide combination. In order to minimize radial
artery size bias, randomization was stratified according to patient sex. PCI with a
drug-eluting stent was performed according to routine local practice and physician
discretion. Patients were preferentially treated with a SYNERGYTM (Boston Scientific,
Marlborough, MA) drug-eluting stent as the primary stent choice, however, other stents were
allowed according to physician discretion.
All patients received dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) prior to TRA-PCI with an oral aspirin
(325 mg) and a p2Y12 platelet inhibitor (either 600mg clopidogrel or 180mg ticagrelor) bolus.
Intravenous heparin was administered to achieve an activated clotting time (ACT) of at least
300 seconds. Immediately following TRA-PCI, the sheath and/or guide was removed and RA
hemostasis was achieved using a standardized and previously validated patent hemostasis
protocol that incorporates the Terumo TR Band Radial Compression DeviceTM.
The technique used for the sheathless introduction of the 7F guide catheter was as follows:
following diagnostic coronary angiography, a 6F 100 cm length multipurpose catheter (MP) was
telescoped through the inner lumen of a 90 cm 7F Mach 1TM guide catheter. The MP was then
used as an obturator to facilitate insertion of the 7F guide through the skin and into the RA
arteriotomy site over a 0.035 J wire. Only after the 7F guide/6F MP combination was
introduced into the RA and advanced together back to the aortic root, were the inner 6F MP
catheter and 0.035 wire removed and the 7F guide engaged into the coronary ostium for
TRA-PCI.
Ultrahigh Resolution Ultrasound Assessment Using the FDA approved FUJIFILM VisualSonics 55
mHz probe and previously established methods,16,17 ultrahigh resolution duplex ultrasound of
the RA access site was performed at 24 hours (pre-discharge) and 90 days post TRA-PCI. This
technique has been well validated as a means to accurately depict and quantify the individual
layers of muscular and elastic arteries. To prevent RA vasospasm, sublingual nitroglycerin
(0.4 mg) was administered within 3-5 minutes prior to performing the ultrasound studies.
M-mode, 2-dimensional and color doppler images were obtained. The RA diameter was recorded
and then the individual borders of the layers of the artery delineated with M-mode
ultrasound. To determine the mean IMT, we started off with the center of the probe centered
over the RA puncture site and recorded the thickest IMT measurements noted just proximal to
the site, at the center of the site (center of probe) and just distal to the site. We then
repositioned the probe more proximally, placing its distal leading edge at the puncture site
and obtained another proximal and mid probe measurement of IMT. The final recorded IMT was
the average of these 5 measurements. Using this technique, we ensured sampling over an
adequate length of the RA proximal to, at and slightly distal to the point of arterial
access.
The RA access site was also assessed for other signs of trauma, including small focal intimal
tears, frank arterial dissections, pseudoaneurysms, arteriovenous fistulae, and vessel
occlusion. Given high resolution imaging, we were forced to distinguish between limited focal
intimal tears that were now easily visualized and simply a result of access site entry from
more frank dissections. For this, we defined a limited access site intimal tear (LASIT) as a
focal tear in the intima that was restricted to and not beyond the access site itself which
did not encroach on the lumen or cause any flow abnormality. Tears or dissections beyond this
were deemed true dissections. All studies and measurements were performed by 2 experienced
vascular technicians who were blinded to treatment allocation with additional independent
review by a reading physician who was also blinded to treatment allocation.
Other Clinical Endpoints Assessed:
Procedural success rates (successful implantation of the stent with residual stenosis of <
30% and no other complications), fluoroscopy time, the number of guide catheters used, and
the frequency of cross-over from radial access to femoral access were also recorded. Routine
clinical and interventional outcomes, including PCI success, in-hospital death, MI, coronary
dissection, urgent revascularization were also prospectively collected. Ultrahigh frequency
ultrasound parameters related
Statistical Analysis For comparisons between groups, two-sided Student t-tests were used for
continuous variables and chi-square or Fisher exact tests for discrete variables. The primary
outcome of the study was a comparison of radial artery IMT thickness at 90 days between the
7F sheathless guide catheter group and the standard 6F sheath/guide combination group. The
primary statistical analysis was based on a non-inferiority analysis and an intention to
treat design. The null hypothesis was that the 7F sheathless Mach 1TM guide would be
associated with at least a 0.08mm increase in IMT at 90 days compared with the 6F
sheath/guide combination. A non-inferiority margin of 0.08 mm was selected as this
represented a relatively small change compared to baseline IMT and RA diameter (~25% of
baseline IMT and only ~3% of RA diameter). It was therefore deemed unlikely that this small
difference would be clinically significant. Based on our own pilot data and a prior study, a
standard deviation of 0.08mm was assumed for IMT measurements. Assuming a one-sided 95%
confidence interval, at least 36 evaluated patients (~18 per group) were needed to have 90%
power to detect if the lower limit of the one-sided confidence interval lies above the 0.08
limit. If the 95% confidence interval lies below this 0.08mm boundary, then the null
hypothesis was to be rejected and non-inferiority declared. Superiority testing was also
applied using a p<0.05 for a level of significance for intergroup comparisons.
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