Vascular access site management during electrophysiology procedures: a European Heart Rhythm Association survey

EP Europace Journal

16 June 2025
Organised by: Logo
ESC Journals ARRHYTHMIAS AND DEVICE THERAPY Arrhythmias, General

Abstract

AbstractAims

Reliable vascular access and haemostasis techniques are important to the safety of electrophysiology (EP) procedures. This European Heart Rhythm Association (EHRA) survey aimed to evaluate contemporary vascular access site management practices across international EP centres.

Methods and results

A 30-question survey was disseminated via the EHRA between March and April 2025, with 401 responses from professionals across 51 countries. Most respondents were cardiology consultants/attendings (82.0%), with 57.3% performing over 150 EP procedures annually. Ultrasound guidance for vascular access was usually or always used by 71.7%, though 21.4% used it rarely or never, and only 17.3% had received formal ultrasound training. Institutional protocols for haemostasis were lacking in around half (46.8%) of centres. Suture-mediated closure was the most common method for haemostasis (60.4%), followed by manual compression (33.0%) and vascular closure devices (VCDs, 5.8%). The figure-of-eight suture with a hand-tied knot was the most frequently used suture technique (79.7%). Just over a third (36.0%) had experience with VCDs, typically reserved for high-risk cases. For procedures requiring transeptal access, 38.1% administered heparin before transeptal puncture, while protamine was rarely or never used by 62.1%. Anticoagulation was partially interrupted in 52.1% and continued uninterrupted in 41.1% of routine atrial fibrillation (AF) ablations. The median bed rest duration post-procedure ranged from 4 h (right-sided EP procedures) to 6 h (AF or left-sided EP procedures). The average quoted vascular complication risk during consent was 3% (inter-quartile range 1–5%).

Conclusion

This survey highlights marked variation in vascular access site management during and following EP procedures, emphasizing the need for further clinical trials to inform best practice and guide future standardization efforts.

Contributors

Mark T Mills
Mark T Mills

Author

Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Sheffield , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Dhiraj Gupta
Dhiraj Gupta

Author

Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital Liverpool , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Piotr Futyma
Piotr Futyma

Author

St. Joseph's Heart Rhythm Center Rzeszow , Poland

Laura Perrotta
Laura Perrotta

Author

Careggi University Hospital (AOUC) Florence , Italy

Christian-Hendrick Heeger
Christian-Hendrick Heeger

Author

Asklepios Clinic Altona Hamburg , Germany

Julian K R Chun
Julian K R Chun

Author

Cardioangiologisches Centrum Bethanien Frankfurt , Germany

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