Editorial to “investigating the role of electroanatomical mapping in single-shot pulsed field catheter ablation”

IF 2.2 Q2 CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS
Yoshiaki Mizutani MD, PhD, Satoshi Yanagisawa MD, PhD, Yasuya Inden MD, PhD
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Meanwhile, pulsed field ablation (PFA), a novel ablation technology that uses non-thermal energy, provides electrical pulses to cause non-thermal irreversible electroporation and induce cardiac cell death.</p><p>In this issue of the <i>Journal of arrhythmia</i>, Kariki et al.<span><sup>1</sup></span> compared the arrhythmia recurrence and procedural characteristics of PFA for AF between the electroanatomical mapping (EAM) and fluoroscopy groups. Fifty-one patients with AF who underwent PVI for the first time were included in their study (fluoro-only group, 31 patients; EAM group, 20 patients). PVI was performed using the FARAPULSE™ PFA system (Boston Scientific, Natick, MA, USA). In the EAM group, the ablation catheter was exchanged with a multipolar mapping catheter (Advisor™ HD Grid catheter [Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, Ill, USA]) after PVI, and the EAM of the left atrium was subsequently generated. As a result of the acute procedures, the procedure time was significantly longer in the EAM group than in the fluoroscopy-only group, whereas there was no significant difference in the fluoroscopy time between the two groups. During a mean follow-up period of 11.2 months, PVI with EAM did not lead to significantly different arrhythmia recurrence rates compared with PVI without EAM. No complications were observed in either of the groups.</p><p>In their study, EAM was performed only after fluoroscopy-guided PFA and not before ablation in the EAM group. Obtaining an EAM with a mapping catheter preoperatively is useful for understanding the pulmonary vein (PV) and left atrial anatomy, which may support the learning curve for PV identification and increase the certainty of catheter manipulation, especially for young fellows and residents. Perhaps the acquisition of EAM prior to ablation, in addition to post-mapping, may have influenced the procedure outcomes differently, despite the small number of samples in the current study. A recent non-randomized study with 197 patients undergoing first PVI using the same PFA catheter at a tertiary referral center reported the same efficacy of recurrence-free rate after a 12-month follow-up between the pre- and post-mapping group (<i>n</i> = 127) and non-mapping group (<i>n</i> = 70), and the median procedure duration, left atrial dwell time, and fluoroscopic time were significantly shorter in the non-mapping group than in the mapping group.<span><sup>2</sup></span> These findings suggest that the creation of a preoperative EAM is unnecessary. Similarly, the current study demonstrated several possible advantages of skipping the creation of perioperative EAM during PFA. First, the procedural time can be reduced substantially. Second, there is concern that changing catheters from a relatively thick guiding sheath might cause air emboli, and not switching to another mapping catheter can reduce the risk of microair-emboli.<span><sup>3</sup></span> Furthermore, the FARAWAVE PFA catheter has an electrode in each spline that can generate an EAM on a 3-dimensional mapping system, and the presence/absence of PV potentials and conduction velocity can be identified despite the small number of acquiring points and relatively low resolution of the mapping image. In addition, the absence of PV potentials after PFA in the acute phase may not always be associated with durable lesion formation, because insufficient electrode contact of the PFA catheter could create a relatively large reversible zone surrounding the irreversible lesion and transient conduction block, which cannot be classified based on post-mapping immediately after ablation.<span><sup>4</sup></span> Finally, ablation procedures without using mapping catheters can reduce medical costs.</p><p>PVI is the cornerstone of AF ablation strategies. However, it is known that paroxysmal AF and persistent/long-standing persistent AF have different recurrence rates after PVI only.<span><sup>5</sup></span> In the current study, both groups included a mixture of patients with PAF and non-PAF. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a common cardiac arrhythmia that is associated with an increased risk of stroke, heart failure, dementia, and mortality. Pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) is an effective rhythm control strategy for treating AF.1 Safe and effective treatments for PVI have been established with cryoballoon and radiofrequency ablation, both of which use thermal energy in the myocardium. Meanwhile, pulsed field ablation (PFA), a novel ablation technology that uses non-thermal energy, provides electrical pulses to cause non-thermal irreversible electroporation and induce cardiac cell death.

In this issue of the Journal of arrhythmia, Kariki et al.1 compared the arrhythmia recurrence and procedural characteristics of PFA for AF between the electroanatomical mapping (EAM) and fluoroscopy groups. Fifty-one patients with AF who underwent PVI for the first time were included in their study (fluoro-only group, 31 patients; EAM group, 20 patients). PVI was performed using the FARAPULSE™ PFA system (Boston Scientific, Natick, MA, USA). In the EAM group, the ablation catheter was exchanged with a multipolar mapping catheter (Advisor™ HD Grid catheter [Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, Ill, USA]) after PVI, and the EAM of the left atrium was subsequently generated. As a result of the acute procedures, the procedure time was significantly longer in the EAM group than in the fluoroscopy-only group, whereas there was no significant difference in the fluoroscopy time between the two groups. During a mean follow-up period of 11.2 months, PVI with EAM did not lead to significantly different arrhythmia recurrence rates compared with PVI without EAM. No complications were observed in either of the groups.

In their study, EAM was performed only after fluoroscopy-guided PFA and not before ablation in the EAM group. Obtaining an EAM with a mapping catheter preoperatively is useful for understanding the pulmonary vein (PV) and left atrial anatomy, which may support the learning curve for PV identification and increase the certainty of catheter manipulation, especially for young fellows and residents. Perhaps the acquisition of EAM prior to ablation, in addition to post-mapping, may have influenced the procedure outcomes differently, despite the small number of samples in the current study. A recent non-randomized study with 197 patients undergoing first PVI using the same PFA catheter at a tertiary referral center reported the same efficacy of recurrence-free rate after a 12-month follow-up between the pre- and post-mapping group (n = 127) and non-mapping group (n = 70), and the median procedure duration, left atrial dwell time, and fluoroscopic time were significantly shorter in the non-mapping group than in the mapping group.2 These findings suggest that the creation of a preoperative EAM is unnecessary. Similarly, the current study demonstrated several possible advantages of skipping the creation of perioperative EAM during PFA. First, the procedural time can be reduced substantially. Second, there is concern that changing catheters from a relatively thick guiding sheath might cause air emboli, and not switching to another mapping catheter can reduce the risk of microair-emboli.3 Furthermore, the FARAWAVE PFA catheter has an electrode in each spline that can generate an EAM on a 3-dimensional mapping system, and the presence/absence of PV potentials and conduction velocity can be identified despite the small number of acquiring points and relatively low resolution of the mapping image. In addition, the absence of PV potentials after PFA in the acute phase may not always be associated with durable lesion formation, because insufficient electrode contact of the PFA catheter could create a relatively large reversible zone surrounding the irreversible lesion and transient conduction block, which cannot be classified based on post-mapping immediately after ablation.4 Finally, ablation procedures without using mapping catheters can reduce medical costs.

PVI is the cornerstone of AF ablation strategies. However, it is known that paroxysmal AF and persistent/long-standing persistent AF have different recurrence rates after PVI only.5 In the current study, both groups included a mixture of patients with PAF and non-PAF. It is not uncommon for the anatomy of the left atrium and PVs to be deformed in patients with persistent AF, and a larger isolation area covering the PVs, left antrum, and damaged substrate is expected to suppress the incidence of repeated AF. However, differences in the patient sample AF types were not statistically significant between the groups in this study. It would be interesting to examine the usefulness of EAM evaluation, focusing on patients with persistent AF. Moreover, the small samples of only five residual PV potentials (6.3%) in the EAM group might underpower the discrimination of the difference in prognosis, given that other factors of non-PV foci and emerging atrial tachycardia/flutter may affect the recurrence rate in addition to PV reconnection, and the authors did not report the prognosis of recurrence in patients receiving additional PFA for the five residual PV potentials. Further systematic evaluations in randomized controlled studies with large-scale samples are required.

This research did not receive any specific grants from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.

Authors declare no conflict of interests for this article.

为 "研究电解剖图在单次脉冲场导管消融中的作用 "撰写的社论。
心房颤动(AF)是一种常见的心律失常,与中风、心力衰竭、痴呆和死亡风险增加有关。肺静脉隔离(PVI)是治疗af的一种有效的心律控制策略。低温球囊和射频消融术已经建立了安全有效的治疗PVI的方法,这两种方法都是利用心肌的热能。同时,脉冲场消融(PFA)是一种利用非热能的新型消融技术,提供电脉冲引起非热不可逆电穿孔,诱导心肌细胞死亡。在这一期的《心律失常杂志》上,Kariki等人1比较了电解剖测图(EAM)组和透视组之间AF的心律失常复发和PFA的程序特征。51例首次行PVI的房颤患者被纳入他们的研究(纯氟组,31例;EAM组20例)。PVI使用FARAPULSE™PFA系统(Boston Scientific, Natick, MA, USA)进行。在EAM组,PVI后将消融导管与多极定位导管(Advisor™HD Grid导管[Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, Ill, USA])交换,随后生成左心房的EAM。由于急性手术,EAM组的手术时间明显长于仅透视组,而两组之间的透视时间无显著差异。在平均11.2个月的随访期间,与没有EAM的PVI相比,PVI合并EAM的心律失常复发率没有显著差异。两组均无并发症发生。在他们的研究中,EAM组仅在透视引导下的PFA之后进行,而不是在消融之前进行。术前获得带有定位导管的EAM有助于了解肺静脉(PV)和左房解剖结构,这可能支持PV识别的学习曲线,并增加导管操作的确定性,特别是对于年轻的研究员和住院医师。尽管目前的研究中样本数量较少,但在消融之前获取EAM以及之后的测绘可能会对手术结果产生不同的影响。最近的一项非随机研究显示,197名患者在第三级转诊中心使用相同的PFA导管接受首次PVI,经过12个月的随访,测图前后组(n = 127)和非测图组(n = 70)的无复发率相同,且非测图组的中位手术时间、左房停留时间和透视时间明显短于测图组这些发现提示术前建立EAM是不必要的。同样,目前的研究也证明了在PFA期间不创建围手术期EAM的几个可能的优点。首先,程序时间可以大大缩短。其次,人们担心将导管从相对较厚的引导鞘中更换可能会导致空气栓塞,而不更换另一根测绘导管可以降低微空气栓塞的风险此外,FARAWAVE PFA导管在每个样条上都有一个电极,可以在三维测绘系统上生成EAM,尽管获取点数量少,且测绘图像的分辨率相对较低,但仍可以识别PV电位和传导速度的存在与否。此外,急性期PFA后PV电位的缺失可能并不总是与持久的病变形成有关,因为PFA导管电极接触不足会在不可逆病变周围形成相对较大的可逆区和短暂的传导阻滞,这无法根据消融后立即的后期定位进行分类最后,不使用测图导管的消融术可以降低医疗费用。PVI是房颤消融策略的基石。然而,已知阵发性房颤和持续性/长期持续性房颤仅在PVI后具有不同的复发率在目前的研究中,两组患者均包括PAF和非PAF患者。在持续性房颤患者中,左心房和pv解剖变形并不罕见,覆盖pv、左心房和受损底物的更大隔离区域有望抑制重复房颤的发生率。然而,本研究中两组患者样本房颤类型差异无统计学意义。研究EAM评估的有效性将是有趣的,重点是持续性房颤患者。此外,只有5个剩余PV电位的小样本(6。 (3%)可能低估了对预后差异的区分,因为除了PV重连外,非PV病灶和新出现的房性心动过速/扑动等其他因素也可能影响复发率,并且作者没有报道因五个剩余PV电位而接受额外PFA的患者的复发预后。需要在大规模样本的随机对照研究中进行进一步的系统评估。这项研究没有从公共、商业或非营利部门的资助机构获得任何具体的资助。作者声明本文无利益冲突。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Arrhythmia
Journal of Arrhythmia CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS-
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
10.00%
发文量
127
审稿时长
45 weeks
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