1. Persistent left superior vena cava transvenous lead extraction: A European experience
- Author
-
Mark M Gallagher, Alexander Breitenstein, Patrizio Mazzone, Jan Steffel, Christoph Starck, Manav Sohal, Elkin Gonzalez, Zaki Akhtar, Sergio Richter, Amir Zaidi, Omar Al-Razzo, Christopher A. Rinaldi, Francesco Melillo, Zia Zuberi, Vishal Mehta, University of Zurich, and Akhtar, Zaki
- Subjects
Male ,Pacemaker, Artificial ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Vena Cava, Superior ,610 Medicine & health ,2705 Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,2737 Physiology (medical) ,Persistent Left Superior Vena Cava ,Superior vena cava ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Humans ,General anaesthesia ,Persistent left superior vena cava ,Device Removal ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Healthy population ,medicine.disease ,Defibrillators, Implantable ,Transvenous lead ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Ventricle ,10209 Clinic for Cardiology ,Right atrium ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Lead extraction - Abstract
Background Transvenous lead extraction (TLE) is rising in parallel to cardiac implantable electronic device implantations. Persistent left side superior vena cava (PLSVC) is a relatively common anatomical variant in the healthy population; TLE in patients with a PLSVC is rare. Method Data were collated from 6 European TLE institutes of 10 patients who had undergone lead extraction with a PLSVC. Patient demographics, procedural challenges and outcomes were reported. Results Ten patients aged 73.4 ± 7.8 years (60% male) underwent TLE of 20 leads (3 left ventricle, 10 right ventricle, 7 right atrium) with dwell time of 82.95 ± 39.1 months. Of the 10 cases, 4 had an infection indication and 5 were biventricular system extractions; 25% of the extracted leads were defibrillator leads. The majority of the procedures were completed in the cardiac catheterization suite (80%) under general anaesthesia (60%) by cardiologists (80%) using a rotational powered sheath (65%). The Tandem approach was used successfully in 3 cases. Complete procedural success was obtained in 100% of cases in the absence of complications within 127.4 ± 74.7 min. There was no 30-day mortality. Conclusion TLE in PLSVC is feasible albeit rare. Standard extraction techniques in experienced hands are associated with favorable outcomes; the Tandem procedure may be an additional technique to improve the safety and efficacy of TLE in PLSVC.
- Published
- 2021