Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT02026180

Micropuncture vs. Standard Common Femoral Artery Access

Randomized Comparison of Micropuncture vs. Standard Common Femoral Artery Access for Reducing Vascular Access Complications

Status
Terminated
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
552 (estimated)
Sponsor
North Texas Veterans Healthcare System · Federal
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Vascular access complications can occur during or after cardiac or peripheral arterial catheterization. These complications increase patient morbidity and mortality, as well as healthcare costs. Several strategies and devices have been employed to decrease the risk for vascular access complications, such as fluoroscopy-guided access, ultrasound-guided access and vascular closure devices. Randomized trial data has failed to demonstrate that fluoroscopic guidance reduces common femoral artery access complications. While meta-analysis data has demonstrated that vascular closure devices decrease time to arterial hemostasis, increase patient mobilization and facilitate earlier patient discharge, they do not reduce the incidence of vascular complications as compared to hemostasis achieved with manual pressure. Ultrasound guidance has been shown to facilitate femoral artery access and reduce femoral artery vascular complications. A new device, the Micropuncture Kit (Cook Medical, Bloomington, IN) allows vascular access with a small 21gauge needle as opposed to the standard method, which requires an 18 gauge needle. The use of the Micropuncture Kit for the purpose of decreasing vascular access complications has not been examined in a randomized study to date. The present study is a 552 patient randomized controlled clinical trial that will help determine whether femoral arterial access obtained using the Micropuncture Kit will reduce the incidence of vascular access complications compared to the standard 18 gauge needle. The specific aim of this proposal is to compare the rate of femoral artery access complications using the Micropuncture Kit vs. standard femoral artery access. It is our hypothesis that the incidence of femoral artery access complications will be lower among patients in whom the Micropuncture Kit is used.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEMicropuncture AccessFemoral arterial access will be obtained either with a 21G micropuncture needle kit or an 18G standard access needle.

Timeline

Start date
2013-12-01
Primary completion
2014-06-01
First posted
2014-01-01
Last updated
2014-07-15

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02026180. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.