The best path to a clogged heart may be through the wrist, a US study says.
About one million artery-clearing angioplasties are performed in the United States each year, and the usual route is to thread a tube to the heart through an artery in the groin.
A major study now shows that going through the wrist instead can significantly lower the risk of bleeding, without the discomfort of lying flat for hours to let the incision site seal up.
Just one in 100 angioplasties is done via the wrist, and the approach is not for everyone. But the study promises to spur more specialists to use the method.
"In experienced hands, it can be done more," said Dr. Sidney Smith, heart disease chief at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a past president of the American Heart Association, who was not part of the study.
"This approach, when done by experienced operators, has advantages."
Angioplasty is prized as a quick, minimally invasive way to restore blood flow in a clogged artery. A tiny balloon is inflated at the site of the blockage, pushing back the clog. Doctors often also insert a mesh tube called a stent to keep the artery propped open. It can be done during a heart attack, to alleviate worsening symptoms that signal a heart attack is imminent, or for nonemergency relief of recurring chest pain.
Who is the best candidate for an angioplasty instead of other treatments is hugely controversial. But once that decision has been made, the new study addressed whether the through-the-wrist route works as well.
Cardiologists have preferred working through the femoral artery in the groin because it is a larger blood vessel than the wrist's radial artery, easier to tug catheters through. When the procedure is over, heavy pressure, often a sandbag, is applied for several hours until the puncture site quits bleeding and essentially seals itself. But heavy bleeding and related complications are risks, happening in from 2 percent to sometimes as many as 10 percent of patients.
Catheters gradually have become smaller and more flexible, and previous small studies had suggested the wrist approach could be safer because that puncture site can be bandaged. In one earlier study, the wrist method even trimmed hospital costs because patients were discharged sooner.
So Duke University researchers turned to a national registry, which analyzes more than half a million angioplasties performed at 600 US hospitals between 2004 and 2007, to see how often wrist angioplasties are done, and the results.
One key caveat: These were first-time, non-emergency cases.
Just 1.3 percent of the angioplasties were done through the wrist. Both methods were equally effective at clearing heart arteries, lead researcher Dr. Sunil Rao reported in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology: Cardiovascular Interventions.
The wrist method cut the bleeding risk by almost 60 percent, however: Nearly 2 percent of patients treated the usual way bled, compared with slightly fewer than 1 percent of those treated via the wrist.
The method may be gaining steam: In early 2007, the researchers measured a sudden jump, as the wrist method accounted for about 3.5 percent of angioplasties performed then.
Rao himself uses wrist angioplasty almost exclusively, but it takes extra training that many cardiologists have not had.
Still, the heart association's Smith said training is not difficult, and the need may be growing: Obesity can limit traditional access, plus more patients today have disease-damaged leg arteries.
"The procedure is not one that would be recommended for everybody," Smith cautioned. But "there are definitely groups of patients where this can be done with the same results and fewer complications."