BACKGROUND: Knowledge of complex arrhythmogenic substrates can help plan ventricular tachycardia (VT) ablation in patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to assess whether preprocedural late gadolinium enhancement magnetic resonance imaging (LGE-MRI) can improve ablation outcomes in DCM. METHODS: Consecutive patients (N = 96) with idiopathic DCM underwent VT ablation with open-irrigated catheters (2006-2016). Before 2012, LGE-MRI was not performed at our institution in patients with implanted devices, but it has been performed routinely in all patients after implementation of a new MRI protocol in 2012. We retrospectively compared acute and long-term outcomes of initial VT ablation procedures in patients with (n = 41) and those without (n = 55) preprocedural LGE-MRI. Procedural outcome was classified as successful if VT was not inducible postablation. RESULTS: The 2 groups had a similar mean age and ejection fraction, comorbidities, and frequency of epicardial ablation. Preablation LGE-MRI was independently associated with improved procedural success (63% vs 24%) by logistic regression analysis (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 7.86, P <.001). This result was consistent even when patients with nondiagnostic MRIs due to artifact were included in the imaging group (OR 4.87, P = .005). Preablation imaging was also associated with improved survival free of the composite endpoint of VT recurrence, heart transplantation, or death, which was met by 11 (27%) and 33 (60%) patients in the imaging and no imaging groups, respectively, after median 7.6 months of follow-up (unadjusted log-rank P = .02). However, there was no association with long-term outcomes after adjustment for other covariates. CONCLUSION: Preprocedural imaging with LGE-MRI may be associated with improved outcomes of VT ablation in DCM.
BACKGROUND: Knowledge of complex arrhythmogenic substrates can help plan ventricular tachycardia (VT) ablation in patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to assess whether preprocedural late gadolinium enhancement magnetic resonance imaging (LGE-MRI) can improve ablation outcomes in DCM. METHODS: Consecutive patients (N = 96) with idiopathic DCM underwent VT ablation with open-irrigated catheters (2006-2016). Before 2012, LGE-MRI was not performed at our institution in patients with implanted devices, but it has been performed routinely in all patients after implementation of a new MRI protocol in 2012. We retrospectively compared acute and long-term outcomes of initial VT ablation procedures in patients with (n = 41) and those without (n = 55) preprocedural LGE-MRI. Procedural outcome was classified as successful if VT was not inducible postablation. RESULTS: The 2 groups had a similar mean age and ejection fraction, comorbidities, and frequency of epicardial ablation. Preablation LGE-MRI was independently associated with improved procedural success (63% vs 24%) by logistic regression analysis (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 7.86, P <.001). This result was consistent even when patients with nondiagnostic MRIs due to artifact were included in the imaging group (OR 4.87, P = .005). Preablation imaging was also associated with improved survival free of the composite endpoint of VT recurrence, heart transplantation, or death, which was met by 11 (27%) and 33 (60%) patients in the imaging and no imaging groups, respectively, after median 7.6 months of follow-up (unadjusted log-rank P = .02). However, there was no association with long-term outcomes after adjustment for other covariates. CONCLUSION: Preprocedural imaging with LGE-MRI may be associated with improved outcomes of VT ablation in DCM.
Authors: Edmond M Cronin; Frank M Bogun; Philippe Maury; Petr Peichl; Minglong Chen; Narayanan Namboodiri; Luis Aguinaga; Luiz Roberto Leite; Sana M Al-Khatib; Elad Anter; Antonio Berruezo; David J Callans; Mina K Chung; Phillip Cuculich; Andre d'Avila; Barbara J Deal; Paolo Della Bella; Thomas Deneke; Timm-Michael Dickfeld; Claudio Hadid; Haris M Haqqani; G Neal Kay; Rakesh Latchamsetty; Francis Marchlinski; John M Miller; Akihiko Nogami; Akash R Patel; Rajeev Kumar Pathak; Luis C Saenz Morales; Pasquale Santangeli; John L Sapp; Andrea Sarkozy; Kyoko Soejima; William G Stevenson; Usha B Tedrow; Wendy S Tzou; Niraj Varma; Katja Zeppenfeld Journal: J Interv Card Electrophysiol Date: 2020-10 Impact factor: 1.900
Authors: Kathleen C Woulfe; Cortney E Wilson; Shane Nau; Sarah Chau; Elisabeth K Phillips; Shulun Zang; Christine Tompkins; Carmen C Sucharov; Shelley D Miyamoto; Brian L Stauffer Journal: Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol Date: 2018-07-20 Impact factor: 4.733
Authors: Edmond M Cronin; Frank M Bogun; Philippe Maury; Petr Peichl; Minglong Chen; Narayanan Namboodiri; Luis Aguinaga; Luiz Roberto Leite; Sana M Al-Khatib; Elad Anter; Antonio Berruezo; David J Callans; Mina K Chung; Phillip Cuculich; Andre d'Avila; Barbara J Deal; Paolo Della Bella; Thomas Deneke; Timm-Michael Dickfeld; Claudio Hadid; Haris M Haqqani; G Neal Kay; Rakesh Latchamsetty; Francis Marchlinski; John M Miller; Akihiko Nogami; Akash R Patel; Rajeev Kumar Pathak; Luis C Sáenz Morales; Pasquale Santangeli; John L Sapp; Andrea Sarkozy; Kyoko Soejima; William G Stevenson; Usha B Tedrow; Wendy S Tzou; Niraj Varma; Katja Zeppenfeld Journal: Europace Date: 2019-08-01 Impact factor: 5.214