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Electrophysiologic Substrate, Safety, Procedural Approaches, and Outcomes of Catheter Ablation for Ventricular Tachycardia in Patients After Aortic Valve Replacement

Authors :
Pasquale Santangeli
David J. Callans
Michael P. Riley
Francis E. Marchlinski
Jackson J. Liang
Jeffrey Arkles
Ramanan Kumareswaran
Daniele Muser
Robert D. Schaller
Yasuhiro Shirai
Saman Nazarian
Sanjay Dixit
Simon A. Castro
David S. Frankel
David Lin
Fermin C. Garcia
Erica S. Zado
David F. Briceno
Gregory E. Supple
Andres Enriquez
Source :
JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology. 5:28-38
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Objectives This study sought to investigate the substrate, procedural strategies, safety, and outcomes of catheter ablation (CA) for ventricular tachycardia (VT) in patients with aortic valve replacement (AVR). Background VT ablation in patients with AVR is challenging, particularly when mapping and ablation in the periaortic region are necessary. Methods We identified consecutive patients with mechanical, bioprosthetic, and transcatheter AVR who underwent CA for VT refractory to antiarrhythmic drugs and analyzed VT substrate, approach to LV access, complications, and long-term outcomes. Results Overall, 29 patients (87% men, mean age 67.9 ± 9.8 years, left ventricular ejection fraction 39 ± 10%) with prior AVR (13 mechanical, 15 bioprosthetic, 1 transcatheter AVR) underwent 40 ablations from 2004 to 2016. Left-sided mapping/CA was performed in 27 patients (36 procedures). Access was retrograde aortic in 11 procedures (all bioprosthetic), transseptal in 24 (13 mechanical; 10 bioprosthetic; 1 transcatheter AVR), or transventricular septal in 1. Periaortic bipolar or unipolar scar was detected in all 24 patients in whom detailed periaortic mapping was performed. Clinical VT circuit(s) involved the periaortic region in 10 patients (34%), 2 (7%) had bundle branch re-entry VT, and 17 (59%) had substrate unrelated to AVR. There were 2 major complications (both related to vascular access). Only 2 patients (9.1%) had VT recurrence. Over median follow-up of 12.8 months, 11 patients died (none as a result of recurrent VT). Conclusions Whereas most patients undergoing CA for VT after AVR had VT from substrate unrelated to AVR, periaortic scar is universally present and bundle branch re-entry can be the VT mechanism. CA can be safely performed with excellent long-term VT elimination.

Details

ISSN :
2405500X
Volume :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....201790a4e2cfc14b5fa3ea215fc7243e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacep.2018.08.008