Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation: Who? How? How Good? John D. Day, M.D. Director, Utah Cardiovascular Research Institute Utah Heart Clinic Arrhythmia.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
AF ablation with 3D mapping: our technique and results
Advertisements

Atrial Fibrillation Ablation: My personal experience
Substrate Ablation (CAFE) A Promising or Vanishing Technique
Catheter Ablation in the Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation
Ali Alsayegh, MD, FRCPC,FACC Consultant Cardiologist, Consultant Cardiac Electrophysiologist.
Widimsky P, Tousek P, Rokyta R, et al. Charles University Prague, CZ PRAGUE-7 Study (Hot Lines presenter)
1/ Incidence of AF: 5% of the population > 60 years, candidates for AF surgery in USA 2/ Etiologies: among patients applying for a life insurance:
Ablation for Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation (APAF) Trial Presented at The American College of Cardiology Scientific Session 2006 Presented by Dr. Carlo.
INTERVENTIONAL TREATMENT OF ATRIAL FIBRILLATION St. Mary’s Hospital February – August 2007.
Clinical Title Date Jaret Tyler, MD Clinical Cardiac Electrophysiologist Assistant Professor of Medicine Ohio State’s Heart and Vascular Center Atrial.
Treating Atrial Fibrillation Richard Schilling St Bartholomew's Hospital, Queen Mary’s University of London.
Katheterablatie van atriumfibrilleren Waar staan we? Lukas Dekker.
John R Onufer MD FHRS.  Paroxysmal(that which terminates spontaneously) Persistent Sustained > 7 days, or lasting < 7 days but requires pharmacologic.
Audit of ablation procedures for AF Barts and The London.
Atrial Fibrillation Ablation Cardiology Symposium December 6, 2004 Paul R. Steiner, M.D. Cardiac Electrophysiology.
Dubrava University Hospital Zagreb, Croatia DEPARTMENT OF CARDIAC SURGERY RF Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation in Valvular Heart Surgery Patients.
Late outcomes of the Cox-Maze IV procedure for atrial fibrillation Matthew C. Henn MD, Timothy S. Lancaster MD, Jacob R. Miller MD, Laurie A. Sinn RN,
THE RHYTHM IN LIFE THE SEASONS DO NOT PUSH ONE ANOTHER; NEITHER DO CLOUDS RACE THE WIND ACROSS THE SKY. ALL THINGS HAPPEN IN THEIR OWN GOOD TIME.
Complications of Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation How to Prevent and to Treat Complications of Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation How to Prevent and to Treat.
Impact of Concomitant Tricuspid Annuloplasty on Tricuspid Regurgitation Right Ventricular Function and Pulmonary Artery Hypertension After Degenerative.
Basic Mechanisms of Atrial Fibrillation Relative to Ablation Osama Diab MD, Cardiology Lecturer of Cardiology, Ain Shams Universitry-Cairo Consultant Electrophysiologist,
RADIOFREQUENCY ABLATION OF FIBRILLATION: What clinicians should know. DR CARLOS LABADET Electrophysiology Sector Dr. Cosme Argerich Hospital.
Ablation: past, present, and future Dr Eric Prystowsky Director Clinical Electrophysiology Laboratory St Vincent Hospital Indianapolis Dr Mel Scheinman.
AF: Catheter Ablation Isolation of the 4 pulmonary veins Linear lesions to create additional lines of block 1.
Redo afib ablation John R Onufer MD FHRS
Catheter Ablation of AF Electrogram-based Approach
Asklepios Klink St. Georg, Hamburg
THERAPUETIC OPTIONS FOR AFIB: CATHETER ABLATION SAMBIT MONDAL, MD CARDIAC ELECTROPHYSIOLOGIST.
COMMON CARDIAC ARRHYTHMIAS 2 the complex arrhythmias Mark Earley, St Bartholomew’s Hospital.
Temporal Stability of the Esophageal Location by Computed Tomography Imaging in Patients Undergoing Repeat Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation Karuna.
Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation in the Last 10 Years: Breakthroughs and Advances Dr. Feifan Ouyang Asklepios Klinik St. Georg Hamburg Sept. 19th,
Donghui Yang, Lianjun Gao Department of Cardiology First affiliated hospital of Dalian Medical University Will the endpoint of AF ablation be unified?
Catheter Ablation of AF Electrogram-based Approach Division of Cardiology, Taipei Veterans General Hospital and National Yang-Ming University, Taipei,
The Case for Rate Control: In the Management of Atrial Fibrillation Charles W. Clogston, M.D. Cardiologist CHI St. Vincent Heart Clinic Arkansas April.
Date of download: 5/28/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Left atrial tachycardia after circumferential pulmonary.
Date of download: 5/28/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: New Magnetic Resonance Imaging-Based Method for.
Date of download: 6/25/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Mechanism, localization and cure of atrial arrhythmias.
Date of download: 6/26/2016 Copyright © 2016 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. From: Association of Atrial Tissue Fibrosis Identified.
Date of download: 7/1/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: ACC/AHA/ESC 2006 Guidelines for the Management of.
Date of download: 7/5/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Validation of the Noncontact Mapping System in the.
Date of download: 7/6/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Catheter-induced linear lesions in theleft atrium.
Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation by Roderick Tung, Eric Buch, and Kalyanam Shivkumar Circulation Volume 126(2): July 10, 2012 Copyright.
Date of download: 9/18/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Comparison of Radiofrequency Catheter Ablation of.
Date of download: 9/19/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Atrial Tachycardia After Circumferential Pulmonary.
Contemporary Atrial Fibrillation Management
Fig. 8. Left Superior pulmonary vein mapping to identify the pulmonary vein ostium during sinus rhythm. Top picture is a left superior pulmonary venogram.
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages (January 2007)
Surgical treatment of atrial fibrillation: State of the art, 2012
Figure 1 Pulmonary vein anatomical locations
Isolation of an arrhythmogenic roof vein with the guide of a circular mapping catheter in a case with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation  Shin-ichi Tanigawa,
Κολπικη μαρμαρυγη σε ασθενεις με αποφρακτικη υπνικη απνοια
The State of the Art Mayo Clinic Proceedings
David Filgueiras-Rama, and José Jalife JACEP 2016;2:1-13
Junaid A.B. Zaman et al. JACEP 2017;3:
Recurrent Atrial Arrhythmia After Minimally Invasive Pulmonary Vein Isolation for Atrial Fibrillation  Yaping Zeng, MD, Yongqiang Cui, MD, Yan Li, MD,
ΝΟΣΟΣ ΤΑΧΥΒΡΑΔΥΚΑΡΔΙΑΣ: ΕΜΦΥΤΕΥΣΗ ΒΗΜΑΤΟΔΟΤΗ Η ΚΑΤΑΛΥΣΗ ΚΟΛΠΙΚΗΣ ΜΑΡΜΑΡΥΓΗΣ ; ΓΕΩΡΓΙΟΣ ΣΤΑΥΡΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ ΕΠ.Α ΚΑΡΔΙΟΛΟΓΟΣ ΓΝΘ ΙΠΠΟΚΡΑΤΕΙΟ.
Risk Factor Modification
Stavros Stavrakis et al. JACEP 2015;1:1-13
Volume 13, Issue 10, Pages (October 2016)
Induction of tachycardia confined within a pulmonary vein by electrical cardioversion of atrial fibrillation: Is it proof of reentry?  Mauro Toniolo,
Focal atrial fibrillation presenting in the origin of atrial tachycardia  Chin-Yu Lin, MD, Yenn-Jiang Lin, MD, Fa-Po Chung, MD, Shih-Ann Chen, MD  HeartRhythm.
Atrial Tachycardia in a Patient With Fabry’s Disease
An unusual cause of lone atrial fibrillation in a young female subject due to a rapid- cycling focal atrial trigger  Shankar Baskar, MD, Mehran Attari,
Progressive modification of rotors in persistent atrial fibrillation by stepwise linear ablation  Jichao Zhao, PhD, Yan Yao, MD, PhD, Rui Shi, MD, PhD,
Canadian Cardiovascular Society Atrial Fibrillation Guidelines 2010: Catheter Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation/Atrial Flutter  Atul Verma, MD, FRCPC,
Getting to the right left atrium: Catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation and mitral annular flutter in cor triatriatum  Ryan T. Borne, MD, Jaime Gonzalez,
Periesophageal vagal nerve injury following catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation: A case report and review of the literature  Sandeep A. Saha, MD,
Catheter ablation for the treatment of persistent atrial fibrillation: Maintenance of sinus rhythm with left atrial appendage and coronary sinus isolation.
Stavros Stavrakis et al. JACEP 2015;1:1-13
Figure 1. Radiofrequency ablation findings
Presentation transcript:

Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation: Who? How? How Good? John D. Day, M.D. Director, Utah Cardiovascular Research Institute Utah Heart Clinic Arrhythmia Service LDS Hospital *Disclosure: No conflicts of interest, no relationships to disclose*

Atrial Fibrillation: Magnitude of the Problem 15-30% of all strokes from atrial fibrillation Heart failure risk increased with atrial fibrillation 2.5x mortality increase with atrial fibrillation (Framingham data) 1 in 4 people age 40 will develop Afib No effective or safe medications for atrial fibrillation Anti-arrhythmics may increase mortality or expose patient to significant toxicities Increasing risk factors: age, hypertension, heart failure JACC 2003;41: , Circulation 2004;110:

Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation 1.Mechanisms of Atrial Fibrillation 2.Historical Approach to Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation 3.Our Approach to Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation 4.Future Directions

Mechanism: Wavelet Hypothesis Multiple wavelets – Moe and Abildskov 1959 “Multiple independent reentrant wavelets are necessary to maintain fibrillation. These wavelets are always changing in position, shape, size and number with each successive excitation” Confirmed by animal/human mapping techniques Moe, Am Heart J; 1959

Results 94% of atrial fibrillation triggers (premature atrial beats) arise from pulmonary veins Pulmonary Veins as source of atrial fibrillation (Winterberg, 1906) New England Journal of Medicine 1998;339; RA LA

Why the Pulmonary Veins? Myocardial Tissue Lines the Pulmonary Veins Pulmonary vein lumen Left Atrium

Pulmonary Vein Isolation 1998-Present Electrical isolation of pulmonary vein triggers (premature atrial beats) Success: 50-90% Increased success without pulmonary vein stenosis by isolating outside of vein (antrum) Evolution of Technique –Focal –Circumferential –Segmental –Antrum isolation

Mapping of Atrial Fibrillation Trigger to Left Upper Pulmonary Vein

Sinus rhythm by EKG Atrial fibrillation in pulmonary vein by Lasso catheter A A A A A A A A A A A A AA A A V Sinus rhythm by left atrial recordings from coronary sinus A V Electrical Isolation of Pulmonary Vein

J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol 2003;14: Limitations of Pulmonary Vein Isolation: Pulmonary Vein Stenosis Before AblationAfter Ablation >50% reduction in ostium of left superior pulmonary vein

2003: Wavelets and Pulmonary Vein Triggers Both Important Moe, Am Heart J; 1959

Convergence of Techniques: Pulmonary Vein Isolation and Left Atrial Substrate Modification: 2003-Present Isolation of pulmonary veins (triggers) and modification of substrate both important (wavelet mechanism) New technique: left atrial ablation, wide area circumferential ablation, circumferential left atrial pulmonary vein ablation (Pappone, Morady, and others) Increased success by isolating/encircling outside of the pulmonary veins (pulmonary vein stenosis eliminated) Ongoing issue: Electrical isolation of pulmonary veins by Lasso catheter or anatomic lesion set with pulmonary vein conduction delay (no Lasso  voltage reduction)

Circulation 2003;108: , Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2005;46: Ablation lesion Set Proposed by Morady in 2003 (based on Pappone approach): Anatomic ablation lesion set Success rate similar if pulmonary veins isolated by Lasso catheter versus voltage reduction with an anatomic approach (Lasso not used)

2004: Targeting Autonomic Inputs/Fractionated Electrograms

Location of the Left Atrial Ganglionic Plexi Heart Rhythm 2005;2:S11

Autonomic/Fractionated Electrogram Approach Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2004;43: Lesion sets similar to the wide area pulmonary vein circumerferential ablation approach!!!

New Paradigm for Atrial Fibrillation Pulmonary Vein and Autonomic Triggers Multiple Wavelets Electrical Remodeling Substrate Atrial Size Fibrosis Stretch Drugs In progression to persistent and permanent atrial fibrillation triggers become less important

Mortality and Morbidity with Atrial Fibrillation Ablation 1,171 consecutive patients referred for ablation in Milan, Italy (January 1998  March 2001) 589 ablated versus 582 drug treated (1/3 amiodarone, 1/3 class Ic, 1/3 sotalol/class Ia) End-points: mortality, morbidity (heart failure/stroke), & quality of life (900 day follow-up) Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2003;42:

Pappone Approach Each pulmonary vein encircled (voltage reduction) 2 Posterior wall ablation lines Mitral valve flutter ablation line Right atrial cavo- tricuspid isthmus flutter line

Ablation versus Drug Success Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2003;42: % 37%

Mortality After AF Ablation Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2003;42: Mortality After AF Ablation = Expected for Italian Population 54% Mortality Reduction with Ablation versus Drug Atrial Fibrillation mortality on Drug Less than Expected Italian Mortality

Morbidity After AF Ablation Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2003;42: hello p< % reduction in heart failure or stroke at 3 years in ablated patients versus drug treated patients

Our Current Approach: 3D CT and CARTO Electroanatomic Imaging

Our Results: LDS Hospital 49 consecutive patients age 59±11 (Jan 1, 2004 – October 1, 2004—now 300+) 7±3 months follow-up Drug refractory symptomatic atrial fibrillation (failed 2.3 ± 1.2 anti-arrhythmic drugs) 36 paroxysmal and 13 persistent atrial fibrillation LA size: 48 ± 8 mm, 16 with structural heart disease Follow-up: Pacemaker/ICD logs, Holter, event monitor Approach: Encircle pulmonary veins (end-point of voltage reduction), roof and mitral line, target autonomics and complex fractionated electrograms 12 th World Congress of Cardiology, Vancouver 2005

Atrial Fibrillation Ablation Results: LDS Hospital n=49 12 th World Congress of Cardiology, Vancouver 2005

Complications 300+ cases now performed utilizing this technique ( ) No strokes 3 pericardial effusions requiring pericardiocentesis (1%, experience related) 1 atrio-esophageal fistula* 1 esophageal perforation* –Successful temporary esophageal stenting –No long-term problems *Early in experience before ultrasound monitoring 12 th International Congress of Cardiology, Vancouver 2005

New Achilles Heel: Potential Esophageal Injury Posterior LA Wall Esophagus

Our Approach to Minimize Esophageal Risk: Intracardiac Echo Monitoring During Radiofrequency Delivery and Esophageal Temperature Probes

Future Directions: Ultrasound/Cryo Isolation of Pulmonary Veins? Problem: “One size doesn’t fit all”

Robotic Approach to Ablations? Stereotaxis Magnetic Navigation? Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2003;42:

As most strokes from atrial fibrillation arise from the left atrial appendage…Closure after ablation?

Final Points Who? –Ideal patient: Young, paroxysmal atrial fibrillation with no structural heart disease –Success rate lower with permanent atrial fibrillation and structural heart disease How?  3 main “techniques” –All 3 with similar ablation lesion sets –Pulmonary vein isolation, wide area circumferential ablation, Autonomic/fractionated electrograms –Our approach: Integration of all 3 techniques How Good? –80-90% success rate in experienced hands with any technique