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To assess the accuracy and clinical utility of a novel non-invasive ECGI mapping system in identifying arrhythmogenic regions of interest in patients with congenital heart disease.
Full description
Congenital heart disease (CHD) survivors often present with complex anatomical remodeling and progressive atrial or ventricular arrhythmias that significantly impact their quality of life and long-term prognosis. Traditional diagnostic tools, such as the standard 12-lead ECG, frequently fall short in these patients due to displaced cardiac structures and atypical conduction pathways. While invasive electroanatomical mapping remains the gold standard for arrhythmia characterization, there is a critical clinical need for non-invasive, high-resolution tools that can streamline procedural planning and improve the precision of therapeutic interventions like catheter ablation or cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT).
This single-center, prospective pilot study investigates the clinical utility and accuracy of a novel Electrocardiographic Imaging (ECGI) system. This system aims to overcome the limitations of conventional mapping by offering real-time, non-invasive 3D reconstruction of cardiac electrical activity. A key innovation of this technology is its ability to utilize statistical estimation algorithms to generate cardiac geometries, potentially bypassing the need for time-consuming medical image segmentation (CT/MRI) in standard cases, while allowing for personalized anatomical integration in complex congenital presentations.
Study Workflow
After obtaining informed consent, participants scheduled for elective electrophysiological (EP) studies or device implantations will follow a multi-modal diagnostic protocol:
Patient Profile The trial focuses exclusively on patients with congenital heart disease, a cohort currently underrepresented in non-invasive mapping research. Eligible participants include those undergoing EP studies for tachycardia or those requiring device therapy (pacemakers/CRT) where optimal lead placement is critical.
Safety and Risk Mitigation The ECGI mapping process is entirely non-invasive and adds no procedural risk to the patient. No additional invasive maneuvers are required beyond what is already clinically indicated for the patient's standard care.
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Felipe Atienza, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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