Ultrasound-guided versus conventional femoral venipuncture for catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation: a multicentre randomized efficacy and safety trial (ULTRA-FAST trial)
EP Europace Journal

Abstract
Complications of catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF) are frequently related to vascular access. We hypothesized that ultrasound-guided (USG) venipuncture may facilitate the procedure and reduce complication rates.
We conducted a multicentre, randomized trial in patients undergoing catheter ablation for AF on uninterrupted anticoagulation therapy. The study enrolled consecutive 320 patients (age: 63 ± 8 years; male: 62%) and were randomized to USG or conventional venipuncture in 1:1 fashion. It was prematurely terminated due to substantially lower-than-expected complication rates, which doubled the population size needed to maintain statistical power. While the complication rates did not differ between two study arms (0.6% vs. 1.9%,
Ultrasound-guided puncture of femoral veins was associated with preferable intra-procedural outcomes, though the major complication rates were not reduced. Both trainees and expert operators benefited from the USG strategy. (
Contributors

Dan Wichterle
Author

Tomáš Roubíček
Author

Patrik Jarkovský
Author

Yuriko Sato
Author

Takamichi Kogure
Author

Petr Peichl
Author

Petr Konečný
Author

Helena Jansová
Author

Pavel Kučera
Author

Bashar Aldhoon
Author

Robert Čihák
Author

Yoichi Sugimura
Author

Josef Kautzner
Author
