scholarly journals Evaluation of five algorithms in predicting the sublocalisation of right ventricular outflow tract arrhythmia (RVOTA) when compared to 3D electroanatomical mapping origin

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Raluca Sirbu Prisecaru ◽  
Cristina Leatu ◽  
Leila Riahi ◽  
Victor Costache

Abstract Purpose To compare the predictive accuracy of five different algorithms as verified by successful ablation site using 3D electroanatomical non-contact mapping in patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic but high ventricular burden RVOT tachycardias. Methods 28 Consecutive patients admitted for radiofrequency catheter ablation for symptomatic and asymptomatic, but high ventricular burden idiopathic VPC were recruited for this study. All patients had previous failed or intolerant to beta-blocker and/or at least one class IC anti-arrhythmic agents, and they had normal left ventricular ejection fraction. All patients had documented monomorphic VPC with left bundle branch block morphology and an inferior axis. Concordance of the arrhythmia origin based on ECG algorithm and 3D mapping system site were further evaluated. Of the five algorithms, two algorithms with easy‐applicability and having a memorable design (Dixit and Joshi) and three algorithms with more complex and detailed design (Ito, Zhang, Pytkowski) were selected for comparisons. Results Assessment of the diagnostic accuracy showed that each of the five algorithms had only moderate accuracy, and the greatest accuracy was observed in the algorithm proposed by Pytkowski algorithm when assessed by a general cardiologist and Dixit algorithm when evaluated by the electrophysiologist. However, when the algorithms were compared for their accuracy, specificity, sensitivity, no significant differences were found (p = 0.99). Conclusions The ECG based algorithms for precise localising RVOTA origin simplify the mapping process, reduce the procedural and fluoroscopic time, and improve clinical outcomes, resulting in greater clinical utility. All the five published 12-lead ECG algorithms for ROTVA differentiation were similar in terms of the diagnostic accuracy, specificity, sensitivity and LRs.

EP Europace ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (Supplement_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
A Riano Ondiviela ◽  
M Cabrera Ramos ◽  
JR Ruiz Arroyo ◽  
J Ramos Maqueda

Abstract Funding Acknowledgements Type of funding sources: None. Introduction Patients with preserved left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) and atrioventricular block (AVB) who are anticipated for high-burden of right ventricular (RV) pacing possess a risk to develop pacing-induced cardiomyopathy and adverse clinical outcomes. Left bundle branch pacing (LBBP) has recently emerged as a mode of conduction system pacing in the quest for physiological pacing. Purpose The aim of our study was to assess LBBP feasibility and safety compared to right ventricular outflow tract pacing (RVOTP). Methods Single centre randomized clinical trial to investigate acute success, feasibility and safety of LBBP versus RVOTP. May to October 2020. Patients with pacemaker indication and preserved LVEF were randomized 1:1 and followed up 3 months. Success was defined in LBBP group as a paced ECG < 120ms or with a 20% length reduction from the basal ECG. Results 120 patients were randomized, 60 in each group, 61% males. The mean age was 77,9 ± 9 years and third-degree AVB was the main pacing indication. The procedure was successful in 95% of the cases in both groups (p = 1). The paced QRS interval was narrower in the LBBP group compared to the RVOT group (99 ± 2 ms vs 113,6 ± 11,7 ms, p < 0,001). Lower fluoroscopy times were achieved in LBBP group (3.1 ± 2.1 min vs 4.3 ± 3.4, p = 0,035) and also longer procedure times in LBBP group (68,9 ± 36,9 min vs 44,3 ± 18,7 min, p < 0,001). No complications were achieved and no difference in ventricular lead dislocation was found between both groups (1.6% vs 1.6%)(p = 1). Conclusions LBBP is feasible, safe and provides a narrower paced QRS compared to RVOTP. LBBP required lower fluoroscopy times but longer procedure times compared to RVOTP. LBBP (n = 60) RVOTP (n = 60) p Age (mean ± SD) 76,7 ± 9 79,7 ± 8 0,067 Male gender 62 (37) 60 (36) 1 Successful procedure 95 (57) 95 (57) 1 Basal left bundle branch block 15 (9) 13 (8) Basal QRS duration (mean ± SD) 112,6 ± 29,6 109,9 ± 25,8 0,59 Pacing QRS duration (min)(mean ± SD) 99 ± 2 139,6 ± 11,7 < 0,001 Procedure time (min) (mean ± SD) 68,9 ± 36,9 44,3 ± 18,7 < 0,001 Fuoroscopy time (min)(mean ± SD) 3.1 ± 2.1 4.3 ± 3.4 0,035 R wave (mV)(mean ± SD) 9,9 ± 5,7 9,9 ± 5 0,98 Right ventricle pacing threshold (V)(mean ± SD) 0,67 ± 0,3 0,58 ± 0,24 0,08 Ventricular lead dislocation 1.6 (1) 1.6 (1) 1


2016 ◽  
Vol 69 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 212-216
Author(s):  
Vladimir Mitov ◽  
Zoran Perisic ◽  
Aleksandar Jolic ◽  
Tomislav Kostic ◽  
Aleksandar Aleksic ◽  
...  

Introduction. The study was aimed at assessing the difference between the right ventricle apex versus the right ventricular outflow tract lead position in functional capacity in the patients with the preserved left ventricular ejection fraction after 12 months of pacemaker stimulation. Material and Methods. This was a prospective, randomized, follow-up study, which lasted for 12 months. The study sample included 132 consecutive patients who were implanted with permanent anti-bradicardiac pacemaker. Regarding the right ventricular lead position the patients were divided into two groups: the right ventricle apex group consisting of 61 patients with right ventricular apex lead position. The right ventricular outflow tract group included 71 patients with right ventricular outflow tract lead position. Functional capacity was assessed by Minnesota Living With Heart Failure score, New York Heart Association class and Six Minute Walk Test. Left ventricular ejection fraction was assessed by echocardiography. Results. Minnesota Living With Heart Failure score and New York Heart Association class had a statistically significant improvement in both study groups. The patients from right ventricle apex group walked 20.95% (p=0.03) more in comparison to starting values. The patients from right ventricular outflow tract group walked only 13.63% (p=0.09) longer distance than the starting one. Conclusion. Analysis of tests of functional status New York Heart Association class and Minnesota Living With Heart Failure questionnaire showed an even improvement in the right ventricle apex and right ventricular outflow tract groups. Analysis of 6 minute walk test showed that only the patients with the preserved left ventricular ejection fraction from the right ventricle apex group had a significant improvement after 12 months of pacemaker stimulation.


Circulation ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 130 (suppl_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rangadham Nagarakanti ◽  
April Slee ◽  
Sanjeev Saksena

Introduction: Stable organized atrial tachyarrhythmias (ATs) /"rotors" that maintain AF have been identified in patients (pts) with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (PAF) & persistent AF (PRAF) with no or minimal heart disease. Hypothesis: Biatrial ATs occur in AF pts with systolic heart failure (HF). Methods: We performed simultaneous contact catheter mapping of the RA & LA using 3 D non-contact mapping ) in 83 refractory AF pts during spontaneous AF episodes.Spontaneous atrial premature beats (APBs) & triggered ATs were analyzed. We also compared regional distribution of ATs & activation patterns in pts with & without HF. Results: 24 HF pts, mean age of 62±9 years, 75% male with mean left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) 45.5±9% and mean left atrial (LA) size 4.35±0.8 cm were mapped. They had 42 APBs that triggered 26 distinct organized stable ATs/"rotors". Each pt had 1 to 4 RA or LA regions showing triggering APBs (mean 1.75/pt) initiating AT. APBs arose predominantly from the RA or LA septum (45%) & superior LA/PV (24%) regions (Fig 1a). A biatrial distribution of the stable ATs/"rotors" occcurred in HF pts (Fig 1b) with few focal ATs. Compared to pts without HF (n=59), HF pts (n=24) trended to have more PRAF (83% vs 66%, p=0.18). 78 organized stable ATs/"rotors" were compared for regional distribution in PRAF pts with HF (n=16) & without HF (n=32). Stable ATs with focal LA/PV origin were uncommon in both groups (7% vs. 15%). LA ATs/"rotors" were similar (26% vs. 17%; p=0.58) as were typical RA flutter and atypical RA ATs/"rotors" in both groups (Fig 1c). Conclusions: 1. A majority of APBs initiating AF in HF pts originated from the septal and superior LA/PV regions. 2. While triggers are still frequently present with the LA/PV origin in HF pts, stable ATs/"rotors" had biatrial distribution & a lesser frequency of focal LA/PV ATs. 3. This spectrum of ATs/"rotors" was similar to PRAF pts without HF, potentially supporting similar ablative interventions in both pt groups.


Author(s):  
Thomas Mueller ◽  
Alfons Gegenhuber ◽  
Werner Poelz ◽  
Meinhard Haltmayer

AbstractThe aim of the present investigation was to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) and amino terminal proBNP (NT-proBNP) for the detection of mild/moderate and severe impairment of left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF). In 180 subjects BNP and NT-proBNP were measured by two novel fully automated chemiluminescent assays (Bayer and Roche methods). LVEF as determined by echocardiography was categorized as normal (>60%), mildly/moderately reduced (35–60%) and severely diminished (<35%). Discriminating between patients with LVEF<35% (n=32) and subjects with LVEF ≥35% (n=148), receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis revealed an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.912 for BNP and of 0.896 for NT-proBNP (difference 0.016, p=0.554). In contrast, BNP displayed an AUC of 0.843and NT-proBNP an AUC of 0.927 (difference of 0.084, p=0.034) when comparing patients with LVEF 35–60% (n=37) and individuals with LVEF >60% (n=111). Evaluation of discordant false classifications at cut-off levels with the highest diagnostic accuracy showed advantages for BNP in the biochemical diagnosis of LVEF<35% (4 misclassifications by BNP and 25 by NT-proBNP, p<0.001) and for NT-proBNP in the detection of LVEF 35–60% (25 misclassifications by BNP and 7 by NT-proBNP, p=0.002). In conclusion, the present study indicates a different diagnostic accuracy of BNP and NT-pro-BNP for the detection of mildly/moderately reduced LVEF and severely diminished LVEF. Advantages of BNP may be advocated for the biochemical diagnosis of more severely impaired LVEF, while NT-proBNP might be a more discerning marker of early systolic left ventricular dysfunction.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Sandhu ◽  
Jimmy Zheng ◽  
Paul A Heidenreich

Introduction: Left ventricular ejection fraction (EF) is an important factor for treatment decisions for heart failure. The EF is unavailable in administrative claims. We sought to evaluate the predictive accuracy of claims diagnoses for classifying heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) versus heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) with International Classification of Disease-Tenth Revision codes. Methods: We identified HF diagnoses for VA patients between 2017-2019 and extracted the EF from clinical notes and imaging reports using a VA natural language processing algorithm. We classified sets of codes as HFrEF-related, HFpEF-related, or non-specific based on the closest EF within 180 days. We selected a random heart failure diagnosis for each patient and tested the predictive accuracy of various algorithms for identifying HFrEF using the last 1 year of heart failure diagnoses. We performed sensitivity analyses on the EF thresholds, the cohort, and the diagnoses used. Results: Between 2017-2019, we identified 358,172 patients and 1,671,084 diagnoses with an EF recording within 180 days. After dividing diagnoses into HFrEF-related, HFpEF-related, or non-specific, we found using the proportion of specific diagnoses classified as HFrEF-related had an AUC of 0.76 for predicting EF≤40% and 0.80 for predicting EF<50%. However, 23.3% of patients could not be classified due to only having non-specific codes. Predictive accuracy increased among patients with ≥4 HF diagnoses over the preceding year. Discussion: In a VA cohort, administrative claims with ICD-10 codes had moderate accuracy for identifying reduced ejection fraction. This level of specificity is likely inadequate for performance measures. Administrative claims need to better align terminology with relevant clinical definitions.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 166-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eri Minamino-Muta ◽  
Takao Kato ◽  
Takeshi Morimoto ◽  
Tomohiko Taniguchi ◽  
Kenji Ando ◽  
...  

Abstract Aims Early aortic valve replacement (AVR) might be beneficial in selected high-risk asymptomatic patients with severe aortic stenosis (AS), considering their poor prognosis when managed conservatively. This study aimed to develop and validate a clinical scoring system to predict AS-related events within 1 year after diagnosis in asymptomatic severe AS patients. Methods and results We analysed 1274 asymptomatic severe AS patients derived from a retrospective multicentre registry enrolling consecutive patients with severe AS in Japan (CURRENT AS registry), who were managed conservatively and completed 1-year follow-up without AVR. From a randomly assigned derivation set (N = 849), we developed CURRENT AS risk score for the AS-related event (a composite of AS-related death and heart failure hospitalization) within 1 year using a multivariable logistic regression model. The risk score comprised independent risk predictors including left ventricular ejection fraction &lt;60%, haemoglobin ≤11.0 g/dL, chronic lung disease (2 points), diabetes mellitus, haemodialysis, and any concomitant valve disease (1 point). The predictive accuracy of the model was good with the area under the curve of 0.79 and 0.77 in the derivation and validation sets (N = 425). In the validation set, the 1-year incidence of AS-related events was much higher in patients with score ≥2 than in patients with score ≤1 (Score 0: 2.2%, Score 1: 1.9%, Score 2: 13.4%, Score 3: 14.3%, and Score ≥4: 22.7%, P &lt; 0.001). Conclusion The CURRENT-AS risk score integrating clinical and echocardiographic factors well-predicted the risk of AS-related events at 1 year in asymptomatic patients with severe AS and was validated internally.


EP Europace ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beatriz Jáuregui ◽  
Juan Fernández-Armenta ◽  
Juan Acosta ◽  
Diego Penela ◽  
Cheryl Terés ◽  
...  

Abstract Aims To assess potential benefits of a local activation time (LAT) automatic acquisition protocol using wavefront annotation plus an ECG pattern matching algorithm [automatic (AUT)-arm] during premature ventricular complex (PVC) ablation procedures. Methods and results Prospective, randomized, controlled, and international multicentre study (NCT03340922). One hundred consecutive patients with indication for PVC ablation were enrolled and randomized to AUT (n = 50) or manual (MAN, n = 50) annotation protocols using the CARTO3 navigation system. The primary endpoint was mapping success. Clinical success was defined as a PVC-burden reduction of ≥80% in the 24-h Holter within 6 months after the procedure. Mean age was 56 ± 14 years, 54% men. The mean baseline PVC burden was 25 ± 13%, and mean left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) 55 ± 11%. Baseline characteristics were similar between the groups. The most frequent PVC-site of origin were right ventricular outflow tract (41%), LV (25%), and left ventricular outflow tract (17%), without differences between groups. Radiofrequency (RF) time and number of RF applications were similar for both groups. Mapping and procedure times were significantly shorter in the AUT-arm (25.5 ± 14.3 vs. 32.8 ± 12.6 min, P = 0.009; and 54.8 ± 24.8 vs. 67.4 ± 25.2, P = 0.014, respectively), while more mapping points were acquired [136 (94–222) AUT vs. 79 (52–111) MAN; P &lt; 0.001]. Mapping and clinical success were similar in both groups. There were no procedure-related complications. Conclusion The use of a complete automatic protocol for LAT annotation during PVC ablation procedures allows to achieve similar clinical endpoints with higher procedural efficiency when compared with conventional, manual annotation carried out by expert operators.


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. E873-E879
Author(s):  
Mohammed Quamrul Islam Talukder ◽  
Saikat DasGupta ◽  
Mauin Uddin ◽  
Ishtiaque Syed Al Manzoo ◽  
Mohammad Ziaur Rahman ◽  
...  

Background: For years, septal myectomy has been considered the best available treatment for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. In Bangladesh, however, this technique is only nascent. We present a case series of septal myectomy with outcomes after 1 to 6 years at the National Heart Foundation Hospital & Research Institute. Methods: For this study, 21 patients who underwent septal myectomy from 2014 to 2019 were monitored retrospectively. Evidence was collected from the hospital database and followed up via telephone conversations using a structured questionnaire. Patients’ preoperative, postoperative, and follow-up clinical data were collected and analyzed. Results: The results reveal that after septal myectomy, there were significant improvements in terms of left ventricular outflow gradient (P ≤ .01), septal thickness (P ≤ .01), left ventricular ejection fraction (P = .001), pulmonary arterial systolic pressure (P ≤ .01), mitral regurgitation (P ≤ .01), systolic anterior motion (P ≤ .01), and New York Heart Association class (P ≤ .01). Conclusion: This study suggests that septal myectomy be offered to symptomatic hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy patients, as its survival benefits and symptoms relief are excellent. This study suggests that septal myectomy that dynamic obstruction at the left ventricular outflow tract is the major hemodynamic problem. We hope that with appropriate measures, new myectomy programs in our country can provide extended longevity and restore the quality of life.


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