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Radial Artery Versus No-touch Saphenous Vein

N

National Center for Cardiovascular Diseases

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Coronary Artery Disease

Treatments

Procedure: No-touch vein graft
Procedure: Radial artery graft

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06014047
2023-2109

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study evaluates the short-term and long-term patency of the radial artery and the No-touch vein in patients undergoing isolated on-pump/off-pump coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. A total of at least 774 patients undergoing isolated on-pump/off-pump CABG will be consecutively recruited from Fuwai Hospital and randomly assigned to receive radial artery or No-touch saphenous vein as their second graft. All participants will be invited for clinical follow-up and 64-slice multislice computed tomography angiography (MSCTA) analysis at 3 months and 12 months post-operatively.

Full description

CABG is still the treatment of choice for ischemic heart disease. However, restenosis or occlusion may occur to graft vessels, leading to postoperative myocardial ischemia and subsequent clinical events. Long-term angiographic follow-up demonstrated that vein graft restenosis and occlusion are common among those receiving CABG, with a vein graft patency of less than 50% at 15 years postoperatively.

A novel approach to harvesting the vein is called "No-touch" technique (NT), which can avoid mechanical damage to the vein wall. Previous studies showed that No-touch saphenous vein grafts (NT-SVG) has a 96.3% postoperative graft patency rate at 12 months, compared to 93.5% of conventional saphenous vein grafts (con-SVGs). Thus, the No-touch technique can significantly reduce postoperative graft occlusion. Radial artery(RA) as an arterial material for CABG surgery has a better long-term patency than con-SVG, up to 83% at 10 years. Using radial artery as the second graft for CABG may provide additional clinical benefit. However, the risk of perioperative vasospasm and graft occlusion due to competitive blood flow limit the using of radial artery. Therefore, only the No-touch vein and the radial artery can improve the graft patency. Only one randomized clinical trial(RCT) compared the RA and NT-vein, and this study is limited by irregular post-operative management and small sample size from single center.

This prospective single-center study aims to compare the short-term and long-term graft patency between the No-touch vein and the radial artery. This study will consecutively enroll at least 774 patients undergoing isolated on-pump/off-pump CABG. After obtaining informed written consent, participants will be randomly allocated to either the No-touch or the radial artery group. At baseline, participants will be interviewed to collect detailed information about on demographics, socioeconomic status, cardiovascular risk factors, clinical characteristics, treatments, in-hospital outcomes, general and disease-specific quality of life, function and mental status. During the follow-ups, the investigators will collect information about clinical outcomes events, long-term treatments, function, quality of life, symptoms, and medical care during the recovery period. All participants will be invited for 64-slice multi-slice computed tomography angiography (MSCTA) analysis at 3 months and 12 months post-operatively for graft patency evaluation.

The data adjudicators and computed tomography(CT) reviewers will be blinded to the study. Due to the nature of this study, the operating surgeons, anesthetists and other operative room staff will not be blind in this study. Owing to the use of radial artery need approved by the participant, so participants will also not be blind in this study,

By comparing the short-term and long-term graft patency between the No-touch vein and radial artery groups, this study will contribute major evidence of the possible superiority between two different grafts, so as to improve patient outcomes after CABG surgery.

Enrollment

774 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age more than 18 years old
  • First time undergo isolated CABG surgery
  • Severe three-vessel disease (Left anterior decending artery, Left circumflex artery, Right coronoary artery lesion with more than 75% stenosis)

Exclusion criteria

  • Urgent or Redo CABG surgery
  • Concomitant cardiac or vascular procedures (i.e. valve repair or replacement, Morrow procedure)
  • A positive Allen test, radial artery plaque on ultrasound or a history of vasculitis or Raynaud's syndrome
  • Varicose great saphenous vein or venous tortuosity and judged as can not be used in operation by surgeons
  • Known allergy to radiographic contrast media
  • Planed endarterectomy of coronary artery before surgery
  • Malignant tumor or other severe systemic diseases
  • Combined with other irreversible organ failures
  • Contraindications for dual antiplatelet therapy, such as active gastroduodenal ulcer
  • Participant of other ongoing clinical trials in 30 days.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

774 participants in 2 patient groups

No-Touch vein
Experimental group
Description:
No-touch vein group has two No-touch saphenous vein grafts, anastomose to the right coronary or left coronary system. All patients also acquired LITA-LAD anastomosis to complete the revascularization.
Treatment:
Procedure: No-touch vein graft
Radial artery
Active Comparator group
Description:
Radial artery group has one radial artery graft and one conventional saphenous vein graft, anastomose to the right coronary or left coronary system basing on surgeons' decision. All patients also acquired LITA-LAD anastomosis to complete the revascularization.
Treatment:
Procedure: Radial artery graft

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Shengshou Hu, M.D.; Meice Tian, M.D.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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