Femoral or Axillary Cannulation for Extracorporeal Circulation during Minimally Invasive Heart Valve Surgery (FAMI): Protocol for a Multi-Center Prospective Randomized Trial

被引:3
|
作者
Kruse, Jacqueline [1 ]
Silaschi, Miriam [1 ]
Velten, Markus [2 ]
Wittmann, Maria [2 ]
Alaj, Eissa [1 ]
Ahmad, Ali El-Sayed [1 ]
Zimmer, Sebastian [3 ]
Borger, Michael A. [4 ]
Bakhtiary, Farhad [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hosp Bonn, Dept Cardiac Surg, D-53127 Bonn, Germany
[2] Univ Hosp Bonn, Dept Anesthesiol & Intens Care Med, D-53127 Bonn, Germany
[3] Univ Hosp Bonn, Dept Cardiol, D-53127 Bonn, Germany
[4] Leipzig Heart Ctr, Dept Cardiac Surg, D-04289 Leipzig, Germany
关键词
FAMI; femoral cannulation; axillary cannulation; perfusion strategies; extracorporeal circulation; minimally invasive surgery; EXPERIENCE; ANTEGRADE; PERFUSION;
D O I
10.3390/jcm12165344
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background: Minimally invasive heart valve surgery via anterolateral mini-thoracotomy with full endoscopic 3D visualization (MIS) has become the standard treatment of patients with valvular heart disease and low operative risk over the past two decades. It requires extracorporeal circulation and cardioplegic arrest. The most established form of arterial cannulation for MIS is through the femoral artery and is used by most surgeons, but it is suspected to increase the risk of stroke through retrograde blood flow. An alternative route of cannulation is the axillary artery, producing antegrade blood flow during extracorporeal circulation. Methods: Femoral or axillary cannulation for extracorporeal circulation during minimally invasive heart valve surgery (FAMI) is a multicenter randomized controlled trial designed to determine whether axillary cannulation is superior to femoral cannulation for the outcome of a manifest stroke within 7 days postoperatively. The target sample size was 848 participants. Patients = 18 years of age, with valvular regurgitation or stenosis scheduled for minimally invasive surgery via anterolateral mini-thoracotomy, were randomized to axillary cannulation (treatment group) or to femoral cannulation (standard care). Patients were followed up for seven days postoperatively. A CT scan was performed pre-operatively to screen patients for vascular calcifications and to assess the safety of femoral cannulation. The standard of care is femoral artery cannulation, but is performed only in patients without significant vascular calcifications or severe kinking of the iliac arteries and in patients with sufficient vessel diameter. The cannulation is performed via Seldinger's technique, and the vessel closed percutaneously using a plug-based vascular closure device. Only patients without significant vascular calcifications are considered for femoral cannulation, as an increased risk of stroke is assumed. In patients with vascular calcifications, axillary cannulation is the standard of care to avoid these risks. Retrospective studies have hinted that, even in patients without vascular calcifications, there may be a lower stroke risk with axillary cannulation compared to femoral cannulation. We present a protocol for a multi-center randomized trial to investigate this hypothesis. Discussion: To date, evidence on the best access for peripheral artery cannulation during minimally invasive heart valve surgery has been scarce. Patients may benefit from axillary cannulation for extracorporeal circulation in terms of stroke risk and other neurological and vascular complications, though femoral cannulation is the gold standard. The aim of this study is to determine the risks of peri-operative stroke in a prospective randomized comparison of femoral vs. axillary cannulation.
引用
下载
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Minimally Invasive Extracorporeal Bypass in Minimally Invasive Heart Valve Operations: A Prospective Randomized Trial
    Baumbach, Hardy
    Rustenbach, Christian J.
    Ahad, Samir
    Nagib, Ragi
    Albert, Marc
    Ratge, Dieter
    Franke, Ulrich F. W.
    Wan, Song
    ANNALS OF THORACIC SURGERY, 2016, 102 (01): : 93 - 101
  • [2] Minimally invasive surgery treatment for the patients with spontaneous supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage (MISTICH): protocol of a multi-center randomized controlled trial
    Jun Zheng
    Hao Li
    Rui Guo
    Sen Lin
    Xin Hu
    Wei Dong
    Lu Ma
    Yuan Fang
    Anqi Xiao
    Ming Liu
    Chao You
    BMC Neurology, 14
  • [3] Minimally invasive surgery treatment for the patients with spontaneous supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage (MISTICH): protocol of a multi-center randomized controlled trial
    Zheng, Jun
    Li, Hao
    Guo, Rui
    Lin, Sen
    Hu, Xin
    Dong, Wei
    Ma, Lu
    Fang, Yuan
    Xiao, Anqi
    Liu, Ming
    You, Chao
    BMC NEUROLOGY, 2014, 14
  • [4] Cerebral Microembolization During Aortic Valve Replacement Using Minimally Invasive or Conventional Extracorporeal Circulation: A Randomized Trial
    Basciani, Reto
    Kroeninger, Felix
    Gygax, Erich
    Jenni, Hansjorg
    Reineke, David
    Stucki, Monika
    Hagenbuch, Niels
    Carrel, Thierry
    Eberle, Balthasar
    Erdoes, Gabor
    ARTIFICIAL ORGANS, 2016, 40 (12) : E280 - E291
  • [5] Traditional invasive vs. minimally invasive esophagectomy: a multi-center, randomized trial (TIME-trial)
    Biere, Surya S. A. Y.
    Maas, Kirsten W.
    Bonavina, Luigi
    Roig Garcia, Josep
    Henegouwen, Mark I. van Berge
    Rosman, Camiel
    Sosef, Meindert N.
    de lange, Elly S. M.
    Bonjer, H. Jaap
    Cuesta, Miguel A.
    van der Peet, Donald L.
    BMC SURGERY, 2011, 11
  • [6] A Prospective Randomized Trial of Antislip Surfaces During Minimally Invasive Gynecologic Surgery
    Nakayama, John
    Ashby, Karen
    Wherley, Susan
    Dominick, Christa
    Wang, Gi-Ming
    Tatsuoka, Curtis
    El-Nashar, Sherif
    Waggoner, Steven
    JOURNAL OF GYNECOLOGIC SURGERY, 2022, 38 (02) : 153 - 161
  • [7] Percutaneous intervention versus surgery in the treatment of common femoral artery lesions: study protocol for the prospective, multi-center, randomized PESTO-CFA trial
    Rastan, Aljoscha
    Boehme, Tanja
    Zeller, Thomas
    TRIALS, 2024, 25 (01)
  • [8] PREDICTORS OF NEED FOR MODIFIED FEMORAL ARTERIAL CANNULATION DURING MINIMALLY-INVASIVE MITRAL VALVE SURGERY WITH ENDOAORTIC OCCLUSION
    Rosu, C.
    Bouchard, D.
    Pellerin, M.
    Lebon, J.
    Jeanmart, H.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY, 2012, 28 (05) : S250 - S250
  • [9] Conventional versus minimally invasive extracorporeal circulation in patients undergoing cardiac surgery: protocol for a randomised controlled trial (COMICS)
    Angelini, Gianni D.
    Reeves, Barnaby C.
    Evans, Jonathan
    Culliford, Lucy A.
    Collett, Laura
    Rogers, Chris A.
    Stokes, Elizabeth
    Anastasiadis, Kyriakos
    Antonitsis, Polychronis
    Carrel, Thierry
    Keller, Dorothee
    Liebold, Andreas
    Ashkanani, Fatma
    El-Essawi, Aschraf
    Breitenbach, Ingo
    Lloyd, Clinton
    Bennett, Mark
    Cale, Alex
    Mclean, Lindsay
    Gunaydin, Serdar
    Gunertem, Eren
    Oueida, Farouk
    Yassin, Ibrahim
    Serrick, Cyril
    Rao, Vivek
    Moscarelli, Marco
    Condello, Ignazzo
    Punjabi, Prakash
    Rajakaruna, Cha
    Bone, Daniel
    Lansdown, William
    Moorjani, Narain
    Dennis, Sarah
    PERFUSION-UK, 2021, 36 (04): : 388 - 394
  • [10] Percutaneous internal jugular venous cannulation for extracorporeal circulation during minimally invasive technique in children with congenital heart disease: operative technique and results
    Vida, Vladimiro L.
    Tiberio, Ivo
    Gallo, Michele
    Guariento, Alvise
    Suti, Emirjeta
    Pittarello, Demetrio
    Stellin, Giovanni
    MINERVA PEDIATRICA, 2016, 68 (05) : 341 - 347