导管消融治疗小儿先天性心脏病:现代视角。

J. Silva, G. V. Van Hare
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引用次数: 1

摘要

患有先天性心脏病(CHD)的儿童患者心律失常是这些易感儿童发病率和死亡率的重要原因。不幸的是,到目前为止,还没有系统的描述心律失常的底物和中期临床结果测量这些患者在导管消融的新时代。在这一期的《循环:心律失常和电生理学》杂志上,Houck等人1对2007年至2018年连续接受经导管消融的儿科冠心病患者进行了详细的回顾性两家机构综述,共收集了232例患者。超过75%的患者有两心室底物或手术修复,Ebstein异常是最常见的底物。副通路是最常见的电生理底物,其次是大心房心动过速。84%的病例手术消融完全或部分成功,不良事件发生率为9.4%。在3.6年的随访中,49%的患者复发性心律失常。重要的是,在接受重复电生理研究的患者中,26%的患者发现初始消融后复发性心律失常代表不同的或新的电生理底物。我们祝贺作者报告了这么多冠心病儿童的消融结果,他们在大多数项目中只占消融总人数的一小部分。有几个值得注意的结论。在目前的消融术领域,冠心病患者的急性手术成功率保持相当稳定。来自多中心儿科和先天性EP质量倡议注册的最新数据2汇编了12个中心的急性手术成功率,其中冠心病患者的急性成功率为84%。Papagiannis等发表了一项全面的回顾性研究,研究对象是来自16个中心的100多名冠心病患者,特别是房室结折返性心动过速,结果显示3.2年的成功率≥82%,长期成功率≥86%。特别有趣的是,22例患者(20%)表现为非典型房室结再入性心动过速,已知其较高的手术失败率可能继发于解剖异常,加上传导组织移位和进入慢通道的挑战。回顾2004年的早期报道,Hebe等人报道冠心病消融的急性成功率为88%。尽管在过去的15年中,心脏消融领域的技术进步已经证明了某些患者队列的手术成功率有所提高,但结果并没有明显的变化
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Catheter Ablation in Pediatric Congenital Heart Disease: A Modern Perspective.
Arrhythmias in pediatric patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) represent a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in these vulnerable children. Unfortunately, to date, there has been no systematic depiction of the arrhythmic substrates and median term clinical outcome measurements in these patients in the more recent era of catheter ablation. In this issue of Circulation: Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology, Houck et al1 present a detailed retrospective 2-institution review of consecutive pediatric patients with CHD who underwent transcatheter ablation from 2007 to 2018, collecting a cohort of 232 patients. Greater than 75% of the patients presented had 2-ventricle substrates or surgical repairs, with Ebstein anomaly being the most common substrate. Accessory pathways were the most common electrophysiological substrate identified, followed by macroreentrant atrial tachycardias. Complete or partial procedural ablation success was achieved in 84% of cases with an adverse event rate of 9.4%. By 3.6 years follow-up, there were recurrent arrhythmias observed in 49% of patients. Importantly, recurrent arrhythmias following initial ablation were found to represent a different or new electrophysiological substrate in 26% of patients who underwent repeat electrophysiology studies. We congratulate the authors on reporting their ablation results such a large group of children with CHD, who for most programs represent a small minority of the total ablation population. There are several noteworthy takeaways. Acute procedural success rates for patients with CHD have remained rather steady in the current area of ablation. Recent data from the Multicenter Pediatric and Congenital EP Quality Initiative registry2 compiled acute procedural success rates across 12 centers with an acute success rate of 84% in patients with CHD. Papagiannis et al3 published a comprehensive retrospective study of over 100 patients with CHD from 16 centers specifically with atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia and showed success rates of ≥82% with long term success of ≥86% at 3.2 years. This is particularly interesting because 22 patients (20%) presented with atypical atrioventricular nodal reentry tachycardia, which is known to have higher rates of procedural failure likely secondary to abnormal anatomy coupled with displaced conduction tissue and challenging access to the slow pathway. Looking at earlier reports from 2004, Hebe et al4 report acute success rates in CHD ablations of 88%. Despite the technological advances made in the field of cardiac ablation over the past 15 years that have demonstrated improvements in procedural success rates for certain patient cohorts, outcomes have not markedly EDITORIAL
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