| Literature DB >> 30847659 |
Odette A E Salden1, Hans T van den Broek2, Wouter M van Everdingen2, Firdaus A A Mohamed Hoesein3, Birgitta K Velthuis3, Pieter A Doevendans2,4, Maarten-Jan Cramer2, Anton E Tuinenburg2, Paul Leufkens5, Frebus J van Slochteren2,5, Mathias Meine2.
Abstract
This study was performed to evaluate the feasibility of intra-procedural visualization of optimal pacing sites and image-guided left ventricular (LV) lead placement in cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). In fifteen patients (10 males, 68 ± 11 years, 7 with ischemic cardiomyopathy and ejection fraction of 26 ± 5%), optimal pacing sites were identified pre-procedurally using cardiac imaging. Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) derived scar and dyssynchrony maps were created for all patients. In six patients the anatomy of the left phrenic nerve (LPN) and coronary sinus ostium was assessed via a computed tomography (CT) scan. By overlaying the CMR and CT dataset onto live fluoroscopy, aforementioned structures were visualized during LV lead implantation. In the first nine patients, the platform was tested, yet, no real-time image-guidance was implemented. In the last six patients real-time image-guided LV lead placement was successfully executed. CRT implant and fluoroscopy times were similar to previous procedures and all leads were placed close to the target area but away from scarred myocardium and the LPN. Patients that received real-time image-guided LV lead implantation were paced closer to the target area compared to patients that did not receive real-time image-guidance (8 mm [IQR 0-22] vs 26 mm [IQR 17-46], p = 0.04), and displayed marked LV reverse remodeling at 6 months follow up with a mean LVESV change of -30 ± 10% and a mean LVEF improvement of 15 ± 5%. Real-time image-guided LV lead implantation is feasible and may prove useful for achieving the optimal LV lead position.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac resynchronization therapy; Image fusion; Image-guided interventions; Multimodality imaging; Targeted lead placement
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30847659 PMCID: PMC6598949 DOI: 10.1007/s10554-019-01574-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cardiovasc Imaging ISSN: 1569-5794 Impact factor: 2.357
Fig. 1Schematic overview of study. Each step resembles a phase during the study. In step 1 a CMR scan was made to assess the location of myocardial scar tissue (patients 1–3). In step 2 scar identification and contraction timing analysis was performed on CMR images (patients 4–6). In step 3 a CT scan was added to identify the left phrenic nerve and coronary sinus ostium (patients 7–9). In step 1–3 the feasibility of CARTBox was tested for identification and live visualization of the structures. In step 4, steps 1–3 were combined and used for real-time image-guidance of left ventricular lead placement (patients 10–15). CMR cardiac magnetic resonance, CRT cardiac resynchronization therapy, CT computed tomography
Fig. 2CARTBox workflow and time requirement. The pre-procedural workflow a consists of the acquisition of cardiac MRI and CT (60 min in total), and image processing in CARTBox. The image processing, required to identify the optimal site for LV stimulation, and necessary to produce a detailed 3D-model of the heart, takes approximately 25 min per scan. The implantation procedure b starts with acquiring a 3D-rotational X-ray scan (minutes). The 3D-treatment files are then semi-automatically fused with the 3D-rotational scan based on anatomy landmarks. This takes approximately 20 min and can be performed during RV lead implantation and coronary sinus cannulation. Using this approach, LV target areas can be visualised on live fluoroscopic images during LV lead implantation. CMR cardiac magnetic resonance, CT computed tomography
Fig. 3CARTBox workflow in images. a Segmentation of left ventricle. b Myocardial scar detected on CMR LGE scans. c Contraction timing analysis displaying delayed contraction of anterior and lateral segments. d Transmurality of scar showing inferolateral infarct of the left ventricle. e, f 3D-model of contraction timing (e) and scar transmurality (f) with manual selected target segment (green). ANT anterior, ANTSEPT anteroseptal, INF inferior, INFSEPT inferoseptal, LAT lateral, LV left ventricle, SEPT septal
Fig. 4Real-time visualization of CMR and CT targets. a, b 3D-treatment file of CMR data (a) and CT data (b). c–f After 3D image fusion of the 3D-treatment dataset with fluoroscopy, the LV lead targets and scar segments (c, e) together with left phrenic nerve and coronary ostium (d, f) are visualized on live fluoroscopy during the LV lead implantation. CMR cardiac magnetic resonance, CT computed tomography
Demographic data
| All patients (n = 15) | Target group (n = 6) | Non-target group | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male gender (%) | 10 (67) | 3 (50) | 7 (78) |
| Age (years) | 68 ± 11 | 67 ± 13 | 69 ± 9 |
| Body Mass Index (kg/m2) | 26 ± 5 | 27 ± 6 | 26 ± 4 |
| NYHA functional class (n, %) | |||
| II | 12 (80) | 5 (83) | 7 (78) |
| III | 3 (20) | 1 (17) | 2 (22) |
| Left bundle branch block (n, %)a | 11 (73) | 5 (83) | 6 (67) |
| QRS duration (ms) | 162 ± 23 | 165 ± 26 | 160 ± 22 |
| PR interval (ms) | 188 ± 34 | 164 ± 27† | 203 ± 29† |
| LV ejection fraction (%) | 26 ± 5 | 27 ± 6 | 25 ± 5 |
| LV end diastolic volume (ml) | 209 [165–250] | 175 [142–216] | 222 [184–327] |
| LV end systolic volume (ml) | 149 [123–198] | 128 [96–169] | 162 [135–250] |
| Ischemic cardiomyopathy (n, %) | 7 (47) | 2 (33) | 6 (67) |
| Scar burden (%) | 18 [13–28] | 30 [15–45] | 18 [7–28] |
Values are in mean ± SD, median [interquartile range] and n (%). Significant differences between groups (p < 0.05) are indicated with a†
LV left ventricular, NYHA New York Heart Association
aDefinition according to Strauss criteria
CRT implantation and follow up characteristics
| Target group (n = 6) | Non-target group (n = 9) | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Distance to target sites | |||
| Distance to target (mm) | 8 [0–22] | 26 [17–46] | 0.04 |
| Distance to infarct (mm) | 22 [21–23] (n = 2) | 26 [14–51] | 0.51 |
| Distance to left phrenic nerve (mm) | 44 [18–54] | 44 [36–n/a] | 0.61 |
| Implantation characteristics | |||
| Implantation duration (min) | 146 ± 38 | 127 ± 35 | 0.38 |
| LV lead implantation duration (min) | 47 ± 18 | 55 ± 28 | 0.57 |
| Fluoroscopy time (min) | 36 ± 15 | 28 ± 12 | 0.30 |
| Total radiation dose (cGycm2) | 6758 ± 4201 | 8242 ± 6446 | 0.70 |
| Pre-procedural 3D-angiogram radiation (cGycm2) | 1188 ± 262 | 1449 ± 452 | 0.41 |
| Post-procedural 3D-angiogram radiation (cGycm2) | 1313 ± 333 | 1491 ± 439 | 0.57 |
| Radiation dose CRT only (cGycm2) | 5753 ± 3038 | 5303 ± 5847 | 0.91 |
| LV lead electrical properties | |||
| Paced QRS duration (ms) | 153 ± 22 | 170 ± 22 | 0.18 |
| Decrease QRS duration (ms) | − 12 ± 13 | − 9 ± 27 | 0.10 |
| Pacing threshold (V) | 0.65 ± 0.39 | 0.58 ± 0.20 | 0.64 |
| QLV (ms) | 150 ± 8 | 130 ± 30 | 0.23 |
| Ratio QLV/QRS (%) | 85 ± 10 | 81 ± 16 | 0.66 |
| Echocardiographic follow up | |||
| LV end-systolic volume change (%) | − 30 ± 10 | − 19 ± 19 | 0.28 |
| LV ejection fraction change from baseline (%) | 15 ± 5 | 10 ± 12 | 0.30 |
Values are in mean ± SD, median [interquartile range]
LV left ventricular, QLV interval from Q on the surface ECG to local sensing at the LV electrogram