Although the vast majority of PCIs performed in the cath labs represented in the survey were TFI, we found that majorities of VHA Interventional cardiologists rated TRI superior to TFI
on most criteria, including lower bleeding complications, greater patient comfort, and allowing patients to go home earlier, suggesting that lack of awareness or disagreement about the advantages of TRI is not a major barrier. The 2 criteria where respondents rated TFI as superior to TRI were technical results (i.e., procedure success) and procedure times, which is consistent with findings from trials that TRI procedure times and failures decrease with operator experience and are no different than TFI once operators become proficient www.selleckchem.com/products/gsk1120212-jtp-74057.html [11], [12], [13] and [14]. When we stratified results by cath lab TRI rates, we found that the majority of respondents at sites in the highest TRI tertile rated TRI as no different, or even better than TFI in terms of speed and failures. These data suggest that the fundamental issue underlying the most commonly cited barriers was the lack of recognition Bosutinib supplier regarding the influence of TRI proficiency on procedure metrics such as radiation exposure and procedure success. In order to achieve proficiency, operators and cath lab staff must overcome the learning curve, which was also commonly cited as a barrier. Respondents from the middle and low-tertile sites rated increased radiation
exposure and logistical issues as the greatest barriers while those at high-tertile sites rated the steep Methisazone learning curve as the greatest barrier. We believe that this reflects a true difference, and that for operators who have successfully mastered TRI, they view the true challenge being to persist long enough to become proficient, whereas for those that perform few or any TRIs, issues of safety are more pressing. Greater radiation exposure to the operator in TRI has been previously
documented, and is a legitimate concern. However, it can be mitigated through proper placement of the patient’s arm at their side rather than abducted 90°, and with the reduced procedure time that comes with experience and proficiency; the literature shows a strong relationship between TRI proficiency and reduced radiation exposure [15], [16], [17] and [18] as well as better clinical outcomes [6], and that proficiency increases rapidly and appears to be achieved within between 30 and 50 cases [19]. While our data suggest that interventional cardiologist are largely aware of the benefits of TRI in terms of patient safety and comfort, many “femoralist” operators may have never engaged in a sustained effort to use TRI and become sufficiently proficient to see procedure times fall and success rates rise to be equivalent or superior to TFI. Instead, most believe that TRI takes longer and is more likely than TFI to fail, probably because, in their experience, it does.