Abstract

Surgical ventricular reconstruction (SVR) is an effective treatment to improve left ventricular (LV) function in patients with ischaemic heart failure and an LV anterior-apical aneurysm. Ventricular arrhythmia (VA) is an important cause for morbidity and mortality in these patients. Therefore, encircling cryoablation targeting the VA substrate may be required. Programmed electrical stimulation (PES) can identify patients at risk for VA. The objective of this study was to evaluate the incidence and type of VA during long-term follow-up after PES-guided encircling cryoablation concomitant to SVR for primary prevention of VA. Thirty-eight patients without spontaneous VA referred for SVR who underwent preoperative PES were included (PES group); 27 (71%) patients inducible for aneurysm-related VA received cryoablation. A historical cohort of 39 patients without spontaneous VA, preoperative PES and antiarrhythmic surgery served as the control group. Patients were discharged with an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD). During 74 ± 35 months of follow-up, no arrhythmic deaths occurred. Five-year survival for the total study population was 78%. Twenty-eight (36%) patients experienced ≥1 VA. There were no differences in the number and type of ICD therapies between groups: shocks, P = 0.699 and antitachypacing, P = 0.403. Five-year VA-free survival was 61% for the PES group and 65% for the control group (hazard ratio 1.67, P = 0.290). The majority of the patients referred for SVR without previously documented VA was inducible for aneurysm-related VA. During the follow-up, more than one-third of the patients experienced sustained VA and 25% received appropriate ICD therapy. No difference in VA occurrence or ICD therapy was observed between groups.

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