Zero fluoroscopy catheter ablation demonstrated 100% acute success and a major complication rate of 0.35%, which was not significantly different from the 0.45% rate observed with standard fluoroscopy-guided procedures.
Observational (n=1,853)
No
Does zero fluoroscopy catheter ablation maintain feasibility, safety, and efficacy compared to conventional fluoroscopy in patients undergoing arrhythmia ablation?
Zero fluoroscopy catheter ablation is highly feasible, safe, and effective across various arrhythmias, supporting its increasing adoption to reduce radiation exposure.
Tasa de eventos absoluta: 0.35% vs 0.45%
valor p: p=0.999
Background: Awareness of radiation exposure risks associated to interventional cardiology procedures is growing. The availability of new technologies in electrophysiology laboratories has reduced fluoroscopy usage during arrhythmias ablations. The aim of this study was to describe procedures with and without X-Rays and to assess feasibility, safety, and short-term efficacy of zero fluoroscopy intervention in a high-volume center oriented to keep exposure to ionizing radiation as low as reasonably achievable. Methods: Cardiac catheter ablations performed in our hospital since January 2017 to June 2021. Results: A total of 1,853 procedures were performed with 1,957 arrhythmias treated. Rate of fluoroless procedures was 15.4% (285 interventions) with an increasing trend from 8.5% in 2017 to 22.9% of first semester 2021. The most frequent arrhythmia treated was atrial fibrillation (646; 3.6% fluoroless) followed by atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia (644; 16.9% fluoroless), atrial flutter (215; 8.8% fluoroless), ventricular tachycardia (178; 17.4% fluoroless), premature ventricular contraction (162; 48.1% fluoroless), and accessory pathways (112; 31.3% fluoroless). Although characteristics of patients and operative details were heterogeneous among treated arrhythmias, use of fluoroscopy did not influence procedure duration. Moreover, feasibility and efficacy were 100% in fluoroless ablations while the rate of major complications was very low and no different with or without fluoroscopy (0.45 vs. 0.35%). Conclusion: Limiting the use of X-Rays is necessary, especially when the available technologies allow a zero-use approach. A lower radiation exposure may be reached, reducing fluoroscopy usage whenever possible during cardiac ablation procedures with high safety, full feasibility, and efficacy.
Troisi et al. (Thu,) conducted a observational in Cardiac arrhythmias (n=1,853). Zero fluoroscopy catheter ablation vs. Standard fluoroscopy-guided catheter ablation was evaluated on Major complications (p=0.999). Zero fluoroscopy catheter ablation demonstrated 100% acute success and a major complication rate of 0.35%, which was not significantly different from the 0.45% rate observed with standard fluoroscopy-guided procedures.