1. Lattice-Tip Focal Ablation Catheter That Toggles Between Radiofrequency and Pulsed Field Energy to Treat Atrial Fibrillation: A First-in-Human Trial.
- Author
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Reddy, Vivek Y., Anter, Elad, Rackauskas, Gediminas, Peichl, Petr, Koruth, Jacob S., Petru, Jan, Funasako, Moritoshi, Minami, Kentaro, Natale, Andrea, Jais, Pierre, Nakagawa, Hiroshi, Marinskis, Germanas, Aidietis, Audrius, Kautzner, Josef, Neuzil, Petr, and Jaïs, Pierre
- Subjects
ATRIAL fibrillation diagnosis ,IRRIGATION (Medicine) ,CARDIAC catheterization ,RESEARCH ,TIME ,RESEARCH methodology ,ATRIAL fibrillation ,CATHETER ablation ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PRODUCT design ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEART function tests ,HEART beat ,ACTION potentials ,PULMONARY veins ,VASCULAR catheters ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: The tissue selectivity of pulsed field ablation (PFA) provides safety advantages over radiofrequency ablation in treating atrial fibrillation. One-shot PFA catheters have been shown capable of performing pulmonary vein isolation, but not flexible lesion sets such as linear lesions. A novel lattice-tip ablation catheter with a compressible 9-mm nitinol tip is able to deliver either focal radiofrequency ablation or PFA lesions, each in 2 to 5 s.Methods: In a 3-center, single-arm, first-in-human trial, the 7.5F lattice catheter was used with a custom mapping system to treat paroxysmal or persistent atrial fibrillation. Toggling between energy sources, point-by-point pulmonary vein encirclement was performed using biphasic PFA posteriorly and either temperature-controlled irrigated radiofrequency ablation or PFA anteriorly (RF/PF or PF/PF, respectively). Linear lesions were created using either PFA or radiofrequency ablation.Results: The 76-patient cohort included 55 paroxysmal and 21 persistent atrial fibrillation patients undergoing either RF/PF (40 patients) or PF/PF (36 patients) ablation. The pulmonary vein isolation therapy duration time (transpiring from first to last lesion) was 22.6±8.3 min/patient, with a mean of 50.1 RF/PF lesions/patient. Linear lesions included 14 mitral (4 RF/2 RF+PF/8 PF), 34 left atrium roof (12 RF/22 PF), and 44 cavotricuspid isthmus (36 RF/8 PF) lines, with therapy duration times of 5.1±3.5, 1.8±2.3, and 2.4±2.1 min/patient, respectively. All lesion sets were acutely successful, using 4.7±3.5 minutes of fluoroscopy. There were no device-related complications, including no strokes. Postprocedure esophagogastroduodenoscopy revealed minor mucosal thermal injury in 2 of 36 RF/PF and 0 of 24 PF/PF patients. Postprocedure brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed diffusion-weighted imaging+/fluid-attenuated inversion recovery- and diffusion-weighted imaging+/fluid-attenuated inversion recovery+ asymptomatic lesions in 5 and 3 of 51 patients, respectively.Conclusions: A novel lattice-tip catheter could safely and rapidly ablate atrial fibrillation using either a combined RF/PF approach (capitalizing on the safety of PFA and the years of experience with radiofrequency energy) or an entirely PF approach. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifiers: NCT04141007 and NCT04194307. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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