| Literature DB >> 31758504 |
Lisa Wm Leung1, Mark M Gallagher1, Pasquale Santangeli2, Cory Tschabrunn2, Jose M Guerra3, Bieito Campos3, Jamal Hayat4, Folefac Atem5, Steven Mickelsen6, Erik Kulstad7.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Thermal damage to the esophagus is a risk from radiofrequency (RF) ablation of the left atrium for the treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF). The most extreme type of thermal injury results in atrio-esophageal fistula (AEF) and a correspondingly high mortality rate. Various strategies for reducing esophageal injury have been developed, including power reduction, esophageal deviation, and esophageal cooling. One method of esophageal cooling involves the direct instillation of cold water or saline into the esophagus during RF ablation. Although this method provides limited heat-extraction capacity, studies of it have suggested potential benefit. We sought to perform a meta-analysis of published studies evaluating the use of esophageal cooling via direct liquid instillation for the reduction of thermal injury during RF ablation.Entities:
Keywords: Atrial fibrillation; Atrio-esophageal fistula; Esophageal cooling; Esophageal injury; Radiofrequency ablation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31758504 PMCID: PMC7591442 DOI: 10.1007/s10840-019-00661-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Interv Card Electrophysiol ISSN: 1383-875X Impact factor: 1.900
Characteristics of included studies, population demographics, and comorbidities
| Study | Design | Number of patients | Patient age | Gender (% male) | AF subtype (% paroxysmal) | BMI | HTN | Diabetes | CHF | Ejection fraction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| John et al. | Prospective observational | 76 | 63.5 +/− 10 | 63.2% | 40.8% | 30.5 +/− 5.1 | 68.4% | 18.7% | 26.3% | 55.5 +/− 9.1% |
| Kuwahara et al. | Randomized control | 100 | 63 +/− 8.7 | 40.0% | 32.0% | 24 +/− 2.0 | N/A | N/A | N/A | 64 +/− 6.6% |
| Sohara et al. | Prospective observational | 318 | 63.3 +/− 7.9 | 72.6% | 57.2% | N/A | 14.8% | 4.1% | N/A | 66.8 +/− 6.8% |
Ablation techniques and characteristics for each included study
| Study | Ablation technology | Power | Mapping technology | Ablation type | Average Contact Force | Mean RF time per lesion (seconds) | Anesthesia | Endoscopy timing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| John et al. | RF open-irrigation, 3.5-mm-tip, 8-Fr, force-sensing catheter (SmartTouch) | 24–28 W | CARTO mapping system and Pentaray NAV multipolar mapping catheter | Bilateral antral PVI, creation of a left atrial roof and floor line, and ablation across the mitral isthmus | 10 g | 12.3 +/− 5.3 | General | Within 24 h of the procedure |
| Kuwahara et al. | 3.5 mm irrigated-tip ablation catheter (Thermocool, Biosense Webster, Inc.) | 25–30 W | CARTO system | Circumferential PVI with focal ablation, and creation of left atrial roof or mitral isthmus lines with posterior wall isolation in non-paroxysmal AF | N/A | N/A | Conscious sedation | Within 24 h of the procedure |
| Sohara et al. | 12F radiofrequency hot balloon catheter (Hayama Arrhythmia Institute, Kanagawa, Japan) | N/A | CARTO system | Balloon-based box isolation | N/A | N/A | General | Within 3 days of the procedure |
Characteristics of temperature monitoring and esophageal cooling utilized in each included study
| Study | Temperature sensor type | Temperature sensor characteristics | Gastric tube type | Coolant | Cooling threshold | Follow-up duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| John et al. | 18-Fr esophageal temperature probe (400 series M1024215, GE Healthcare, Chicago, IL) | Tube diameter 6 mm, cuff diameter 8.8 mm, single thermistor inside of the cuff at the distal tip | 18-Fr orogastric tube (nasogastric sump tube 0046180, Bard, Inc., Covington, GA) | 20 mL ice-cold saline | 0.5 °C increase in temperature from baseline | N/A |
| Kuwahara et al. | A multi-thermocouple temperature probe (Sensitherm, St Jude Medical) | Three thermocouples; one of which was placed at the same level of the esophagus as the site of RF energy delivery on the LA posterior wall | Unspecified gastric tube | 5 mL ice-water (0 °C) | 42 °C temperature peak | Up to 8 weeks |
| Sohara et al. | Thermocouple thermometer (Delta Ohm, Caselle di Selvazzano, PD, Italy) | Thermal sensor of a deflectable, 4-mm tip ablation catheter | Unspecified gastric tube coated with xylocaine jelly | 10–20 mL ionized contrast medium (Gastrografin) or nonionized low osmotic contrast medium (iopamidol) diluted 1:2 with physiologic saline refrigerated to about 10 °C | 43 °C temperature peak (group B) or 39 °C temperature peak (group C) | >10 months minimum, mean 3.6 years |
Fig. 1Results from John et al. Patients in the treatment group were actively cooled by injecting a 20 mL bolus of ice-cold saline via orogastric tube into the upper esophagus if/when the LET increased by 0.5 °C above baseline. Grade III and grade IV lesions are shown separately
Fig. 2Results from Kuwahara et al. Patients in the treatment group were actively cooled by injecting 5 mL of ice water prior to RF energy delivery and subsequently when the LET reached 42 °C. The Grade III/IV lesion category represents all lesions qualitatively graded as “severe,” with mild lesions in Grade I and moderate lesions in Grade II
Fig. 3Results from Sohara et al. Patients in group A received only LET monitoring without cooling of the esophagus. Patients in groups B and C received LET monitoring with esophageal cooling when the LET exceeded 43 °C and 39 °C, respectively. Cooling was by infusion of cooled saline mixed with Gastrografin. The Grade III/IV lesion category represents all lesions graded as ulcers (scored as 3 or 4 by Sohara et al.)
Fig. 4.Forest plot comparing the outcome of all lesions in the three clinical studies. Events are the occurrence of grade I, II, III, and IV lesions
Fig. 5.Forest plot comparing the outcome of low-grade lesions in the three clinical studies. Events are the occurrence of grade I and II lesions
Fig. 6Forest plot comparing the outcome of severe lesions. Events are the occurrence of grade III/IV lesions