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A significant portion of patients with cardiac diseases like coronary artery disease (CAD), dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) develops ventricular tachycardia (VT). The standard ablation procedure is carried out from endocardial only. In 30% of patients treated this way a successful ablation is not possible. In these cases the scar areas are mostly located in the outer layer of the myocardium. Ablation is feasible only if the catheter is placed in the epicardial space to reach the surface of the heart muscle. In the past this type of ablation was performed as a second procedure in case of recurrent VTs after unsuccessful endocardial ablation.
This prospective randomized trial compares the standard ablation procedure (endocardial ablation only) with a new strategy. This means in a single procedure the scar areas responsible for VT are marked and obliterated from endocardial as well as from epicardial. The primary endpoint is recurrence of VT after endo- and epicardial vs. endocardial ablation only.
40 patients will be enrolled. They will be randomized 1:1 in the study arms "strategy 1" which is standard endocardial ablation and "strategy 2" which is endo- and epicardial ablation.
At least 12 months are planned for enrollment. The study is closed if the patient last enrolled has completed the 12-months-follow up. Follow up visits are scheduled 3, 6 and 12 months after the ablation procedure. Recurrence of VT is monitored by ICD (implanted cardioverter defibrillator) interrogation.
Both ablation strategies are well established and conducted with standard equipment. The methodology of this study does not contain any experimental approaches. The standard insurance coverage of the hospital is guaranteed for all enrolled patients.
Full description
A significant portion of patients with cardiac diseases like coronary artery disease (CAD), dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) develops ventricular tachycardia (VT). These arrhythmia often causes symptoms like dizziness, shortness of breath, angina or even cardiogenic shock. Large trials showed that VTs are associated with a 3.4 to 5fold increase in mortality even if each episode was successfully terminated by an ICD. Initially most patients are treated with antiarrhythmics. If these drugs are ineffective or not tolerated because of side effects catheter ablation (obliteration of cardiac tissue by radiofrequency) is the only alternative therapy.
The mechanism of most VTs are reentry circuits which are typically found in areas of scar in the left or right chamber. These scar areas may be located in the inner layer of the myocardium (endocardial), in the outer layer (epicardial) or in all layers of the heart muscle (transmural). The standard ablation procedure is carried out from endocardial only. This means catheters introduced through the femoral veins or arteries are placed in the right or left ventricle. In 30% of patients treated this way a successful ablation is not possible. In these cases the scar areas are mostly located in the outer layer of the myocardium. Ablation is feasible only if the catheter is placed in the epicardial space to reach the surface of the heart muscle. In the past this type of ablation was performed as a second procedure in case of recurrent VTs after unsuccessful endocardial ablation.
This prospective randomized trial compares the standard ablation procedure (endocardial ablation only) with a new strategy. This means in a single procedure the scar areas responsible for VT are marked and obliterated from endocardial as well as from epicardial. The primary endpoint is recurrence of VT after endo- and epicardial vs. endocardial ablation only.
Patients are eligible if they show documented VT on the basis of an underlying cardiac disease and a therapy with antiarrhythmics was ineffective or not tolerated. In terms of this study cardiac disease means CAD, DCM and ARVC. All patients have to be treated with an ICD. Patients are not eligible if VT is not documented, if there is no structural heart disease, if they have a mechanical aortic valve or a pacemaker/ICD with epicardial leads implanted or if a pericardial puncture must not be done.
40 patients will be enrolled. They will be randomized 1:1 in the study arms "strategy 1" which is standard endocardial ablation and "strategy 2" which is endo- and epicardial ablation.
In case of strategy 1 ablation catheters are placed in the right, left or both ventricles through the femoral veins/arteries. VT is induced by programmed stimulation and then analysed. By means of 3D-electroanatomical mapping the endocardial surface is reconstructed. The scar areas are marked and in a second step obliterated.
In case of strategy 2 in addition to the endocardial access via femoral veins/arteries a pericardial puncture is performed to get access to the epicardial space. This allows placement of ablation catheters on the epicardial surface of the heart. VT is induced and analysed from endo- and epicardial. In addition to strategy 1 a 3D-reconstruction of the epicardial surface is made and scar areas are marked like from endocardial. In a first step endocardial ablation is performed. Thereafter changes in epicardial scar areas are analyzed. In case of still inducible VT after endocardial ablation epicardial ablation is performed as a second step. The success of strategy 1 and 2 is always checked by programmed ventricular stimulation.
At least 12 months are planned for enrollment. The study is closed if the patient last enrolled has completed the 12-months-follow up. Follow up visits are scheduled at 3, 6 and 12 months after the ablation procedure. Recurrence of VT is monitored by ICD interrogation.
Both ablation strategies are well established and conducted with standard equipment. The methodology of this study does not contain any experimental approaches. The standard insurance coverage of the hospital is guaranteed for all enrolled patients.
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40 participants in 2 patient groups
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Joerg Lauschke, Dr.; Dietmar Baensch, Prof. Dr.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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