Non-invasive cardiac mapping in clinical practice: Application to the ablation of cardiac arrhythmias
Dubois, R., Shah, A.J., Hocini, M., Denis, A., Derval, N., Cochet, H., Sacher, F., Bear, L., Duchateau, J., Jais, P. and Haissaguerre, M., 2015. Non-invasive cardiac mapping in clinical practice: Application to the ablation of cardiac arrhythmias. Journal of Electrocardiology, 48(6), pp.966-974.
Aims
Description of clinical experience in using non-invasive mapping technique to identify the sources of electrical disorders and guide catheter ablation of atrial and ventricular arrhythmias.
Methods/Background
- Prospective, non-randomized
- Patients mapped non-invasively:
- 23 Paraoxysmal AF
- 103 Persistent AF
- 52 with various clinical ATs
- Using the driver-density map as a guide, point-by-point lesions applied at area of reentrant or focal drivers of PeAF, starting with region of highest driver density and proceeding in decreasing order.
Results
- PAF: 657 drivers mapped; termination achieved in all
- PeAF: Acute termination = 80%; driver-based ablation guided by non-invasive mapping achieved similar 12-month clinical outcomes to traditional approach but with half the amount of ablation
- AT: all 48 evaluable clinical ATs were successfully terminated by ablation
Upper & Middle Panels: The endpoint of local ablation is increase in local cycle length and transformation of rapid and complex signals into slower local rhythm.
Lower Panel: It is not desirable to achieve complete electrogram abolition locally which results in tissue scarring post-ablation.
Study Authors' Conclusion
“Various atrial and ventricular arrhythmias including complex fibrillatory processes can be mapped non-invasively to guide catheter ablation. The pre- and peri-procedural utility of the system in panoramic 3D mapping expresses its potential to reduce invasive procedural, fluoroscopic and ablation times.”