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Radio-frequency ablation as primary management of well-tolerated sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia in patients with structural heart disease and left ventricular ejection fraction over 30%

Authors :
Michel Haïssaguerre
Christian de Chillou
Katja Zeppenfeld
Marc Delay
Francesca Baratto
Andrei Forclaz
Paolo Della Bella
Mélèze Hocini
Philippe Maury
Jurg Schlaepfer
Marius Andronache
Nicolas Sadoul
Nicolas Derval
Didier Klug
I. Magnin-Poull
Frédéric Bouisset
Roman Brenner
Alexandre Duparc
Anne Rollin
Giuseppe Maccabelli
Etienne Delacrétaz
Pierre Mondoly
Pierre Jaïs
Marcin Gawrysiak
George J. Klein
Etienne Pruvot
François Brigadeau
Frederic Sacher
Dominique Lacroix
Source :
European Heart Journal, vol. 35, no. 22, pp. 1479-1485, Maury, Philippe; Baratto, Francesca; Zeppenfeld, Katja; Klein, George; Delacrétaz, Etienne; Sacher, Frederic; Pruvot, Etienne; Brigadeau, Francois; Rollin, Anne; Andronache, Marius; Maccabelli, Giuseppe; Gawrysiak, Marcin; Brenner, Roman; Forclaz, Andrei; Schlaepfer, Jürg; Lacroix, Dominique; Duparc, Alexandre; Mondoly, Pierre; Bouisset, Frederic; Delay, Marc; ... (2014). Radio-frequency ablation as primary management of well-tolerated sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia in patients with structural heart disease and left ventricular ejection fraction over 30%. European Heart Journal, 35(22), pp. 1479-1485. Oxford University Press 10.1093/eurheartj/ehu040 , European Heart Journal, 35(22), 1479-U54
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

AIMS: Patients with well-tolerated sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (SMVT) and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) over 30% may benefit from a primary strategy of VT ablation without immediate need for a 'back-up' implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD). METHODS AND RESULTS: One hundred and sixty-six patients with structural heart disease (SHD), LVEF over 30%, and well-tolerated SMVT (no syncope) underwent primary radiofrequency ablation without ICD implantation at eight European centres. There were 139 men (84%) with mean age 62 ± 15 years and mean LVEF of 50 ± 10%. Fifty-five percent had ischaemic heart disease, 19% non-ischaemic cardiomyopathy, and 12% arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy. Three hundred seventy-eight similar patients were implanted with an ICD during the same period and serve as a control group. All-cause mortality was 12% (20 patients) over a mean follow-up of 32 ± 27 months. Eight patients (40%) died from non-cardiovascular causes, 8 (40%) died from non-arrhythmic cardiovascular causes, and 4 (20%) died suddenly (SD) (2.4% of the population). All-cause mortality in the control group was 12%. Twenty-seven patients (16%) had a non-fatal recurrence at a median time of 5 months, while 20 patients (12%) required an ICD, of whom 4 died (20%). CONCLUSION: Patients with well-tolerated SMVT, SHD, and LVEF > 30% undergoing primary VT ablation without a back-up ICD had a very low rate of arrhythmic death and recurrences were generally non-fatal. These data would support a randomized clinical trial comparing this approach with others incorporating implantation of an ICD as a primary strategy.

Details

ISSN :
15229645
Volume :
35
Issue :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European heart journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8304682bd27501248a2263791fd413b5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehu040