Abstract

Abstract Background the electrophysiological substrate underpinning ventricular tachycardia (VT) in cardiac amyloidosis (CA) remains elusive, and outcomes of catheter ablation in this peculiar population are currently unknown. Purpose we sought to describe the electrophysiological substrate and clinical outcomes of VT ablation in a cohort of patients with CA. Methods we included 19 consecutive patients (mean age, 69±10 years; male sex, 89%) with CA (ATTR, n=13; AL, n=6) undergoing catheter ablation for VT/ventricular fibrillation (VF) between 2013 and 2023 in a retrospective, observational, international study, involving 7 referral European and North American electrophysiology units. The primary efficacy outcome was recurrent VT/VF during follow-up, while the primary safety outcome included major procedure-related adverse events. Results the indication for ablation was drug-refractory VT in 16 patients (84%), and PVC-initiated polymorphic VT/VF in 3 (16%). Catheter ablation was performed using endocardial (n=14, 74%) or endo-epicardial approaches (n=5, 26%). Complete endocardial electroanatomical voltage maps of the left and right ventricles were obtained in 14 (74%) and 6 (32%) patients, respectively. Each patient had evidence of low-voltage areas, most commonly involving the interventricular septum (n=12); late potentials were recorded in 13 patients (68%). A median of 1 (1-2) VTs were inducible per patient; in 10 subjects (43% of mappable VTs), activation mapping was consistent with septal VT origin. Complete procedural success was obtained in 13 patients (68%), at the expense of 4 (21%) major procedure-related adverse events. After a median follow-up of 36 (18-54) months, sustained VT/VF recurrence was observed in 9 patients (47%); survival free from VT/VF recurrence was 74% (95%CI, 56-96%) at 12 months, and 53% (95%CI, 34-94%) at 36-month follow-up; the majority of patients remained on antiarrhythmic drugs (Figure). Low-voltage QRS (HR,21.96; p=0.022) and complete procedural success (HR,0.08; p=0.029) were associated with recurrent VT/VF at multivariable analysis (Figure). Conclusions catheter ablation of VT/VF is associated with favorable acute and mid-term arrhythmia control, yet with substantial risk of procedure-related complications and long-term recurrences. Septal substrate and frailty challenge successful management of patients with CA and VT/VF.Multimodality evaluation of LV substrateMain Study Outcomes

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