Arrhythmia Mechanisms and Outcomes of Ablation in Pediatric Patients With Congenital Heart Disease
Author(s) -
Charlotte A. Houck,
Stephanie F. Chandler,
Ad J.J.C. Bogers,
John K. Triedman,
Edward P. Walsh,
Natasja M.S. de Groot,
Dominic J. Abrams
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
circulation arrhythmia and electrophysiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.684
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1941-3149
pISSN - 1941-3084
DOI - 10.1161/circep.119.007663
Subject(s) - medicine , cardiology , catheter ablation , tachycardia , atrial tachycardia , ablation , heart disease , population , ventricular tachycardia , ventricle , environmental health
Background: In contrast to the adult population with congenital heart disease (CHD), arrhythmia mechanisms and outcomes of ablation in pediatric patients with CHD in recent era have not been studied in detail. Aims of this study were to determine arrhythmia mechanisms and to evaluate procedural and long-term outcomes in pediatric patients with CHD undergoing catheter ablation. Methods: Consecutive patients <18 years of age with CHD undergoing catheter ablation over an 11-year period (2007–2018) were included. Procedural outcome included complete or partial success, failure or empirical ablation. Long-term outcome included arrhythmia recurrence and burden according to a 12-point clinical arrhythmia severity score. Results: The study population consisted of 232 patients (11.7 years [0.01–17.8], 33.5 kg [2.2–130.1]). The most common diagnoses were Ebstein’s anomaly (n=44), septal defects (n=39), and single ventricle (n=36). Arrhythmia mechanisms included atrioventricular reentry tachycardia (n=104, 90 patients), atrioventricular nodal reentry tachycardia (n=33, 29 patients), twin atrioventricular nodal tachycardia (n=3, 2 patients), macroreentrant atrial tachycardia (n=59, 56 patients), focal atrial tachycardia (n=33, 25 patients), ventricular ectopy (n=10, 8 patients), and ventricular tachycardia (n=15, 13 patients). Fifty-six arrhythmias (39 patients) were undefined. Outcomes included complete success (n=189, 81%), partial success (n=7, 3%), failure (n=16, 7%), or empirical ablation (n=20, 9%). Over 3.6 years (0.3–10.7) arrhythmia recurred in 49%. Independent of arrhythmia recurrence, arrhythmia scores decreased from 4 (0–10) at baseline to 0.5 (0–8) at 4 years follow-up (P <0.001). In 23/51 repeat procedures (45%), a different arrhythmia substrate was found. Overall adverse event rate was 9.4%, although only 1.6% (n=4) were of major severity and 0.8% (n=2) of moderate severity.Conclusions: Pediatric patients with CHD demonstrate a broad spectrum of arrhythmia mechanisms. Despite recurrence and emergence of novel mechanisms after a successful procedure, ablation can be performed safely and successfully resulting in decreased arrhythmia burden.
Accelerating Research
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom
Address
John Eccles HouseRobert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom