Abstract 17636: Health Status Outcomes in Patients With Radial Access for PCI
Background: While concerns about the safety and procedural success of radial, as opposed to femoral, access for PCI have largely been abated, the association of radial access with patients’ health status recovery has not been explored. To address this gap in knowledge, we compared the symptoms, physical function and quality of life 1 year after PCI in patients treated with radial, as compared with femoral, access. Methods: This is a 10-center study of PCI, in whom 48 of 139 (35%) interventionalists used both radial and femoral approaches between 2009-2010. A total 2628 patients without prior CABG were interviewed and followed for one year. The previously validated Seattle Angina Questionnaire (SAQ) was used to assess disease-specific health status and the EQ-5D was used to quantify generic quality of life. Clinical characteristics and health status outcomes were compared between 296 radial and 2332 femoral PCI procedures. Results: Radial access was used in 11.2% of patients. No demographic (age, gender, race) or clinical factors (e.g. BMI, smoking, diabetes, hypertension, renal disease or prior cardiac history) were associated with radial use, except for an increased use among those with PAD (10.5% radial vs. 6.8% femoral, p=0.022) but reduced use among those with prior PCI (38.3% vs. 32.1%, p=0.037). There was no difference in health status outcomes based on SAQ angina frequency and quality of life, or the EQ-5D at baseline, 6 months or one year (table). Conclusion: In this multi-center observational registry, there was no association of radial access with long-term health status outcomes. These data suggest that there are no offsetting concerns about patients’ long-term health status benefits to counterbalance the peri-procedural safety benefits of a radial approach.