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Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation for Hemodynamic Support of Ventricular Tachycardia Ablation

Authors :
Teresa Oloriz
Ambra Licia Di Prima
Fabrizio Monaco
Andrea Radinovic
Gabriele Paglino
Damiano Regazzoli
Caterina Bisceglia
Nicola Trevisi
Francesca Baratto
Alberto Zangrillo
Paolo Della Bella
Simona Silvetti
Giuseppe D'Angelo
Pasquale Vergara
Federico Pappalardo
Nicolò Albanese
John Silberbauer
Manuela Cireddu
Baratto, Francesca
Pappalardo, Federico
Oloriz, Teresa
Bisceglia, Caterina
Vergara, Pasquale
Silberbauer, John
Albanese, Nicolò
Cireddu, Manuela
D'Angelo, Giuseppe
Di Prima, Ambra Licia
Monaco, Fabrizio
Paglino, Gabriele
Radinovic, Andrea
Regazzoli, Damiano
Silvetti, Simona
Trevisi, Nicola
Zangrillo, Alberto
Della Bella, Paolo
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Lippincott Williams and Wilkins, 2016.

Abstract

Background— We report the experience in a cohort of consecutive patients receiving extracorporeal membrane oxygenation during catheter ablation of unstable ventricular tachycardia (VT) at our center. Methods and Results— From 2010 to 2015, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation was initiated in 64 patients (average age: 63±15 years; left ventricular ejection fraction in 27±9%; cardiogenic shock in 23%, and electrical storm in 62% of patients) undergoing 74 unstable VT catheter ablation procedures. At least one VT was terminated in 81% of procedures with baseline inducible VT, and VT noninducibility was achieved in 69%. Acute heart failure occurred in 5 patients: 3 underwent emergency heart transplantation, 1 had left ventricular assist device (LVAD) implantation, and 1 patient eventually died because of subsequent mesenteric ischemia. All other patients were discharged alive. After a median follow-up of 21 months (13–28 months), VT recurrence was 33%; overall survival was 56 out of 64 patients (88%). Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation–supported ablation was the bridge to LVAD in 6.9% and to heart transplantation in 3.5% of patients. VT recurrence was related to ablation success (after 180 days of follow up: 19% when VT was noninducible, 42% if nonclinical VT was inducible, 75% when clinical VT was inducible, and 75% in untested patients, P P P =0.001) and left ventricular ejection fraction (hazard ratio 0.916; P =0.008) correlated with all-cause death, LVAD, and heart transplantation. Conclusions— Ablation of unstable VTs can be safely supported by extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, which allows rhythm stabilization with low procedure mortality, bridging decompensated patients to permanent LVAD or heart transplantation. Successful ablation is associated with better outcomes than unsuccessful ablation.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....522987e83920877c90bf7ac8686f6388