Abstract

Abstract Terminal Heart Failure with reduced Ejection Fraction (HFrEF) is associated with severe morbidity and mortality. Mechanical Left Ventricular Assist Devices (LVAD) are often used to provide these patients with a last resort therapy and as bridge to transplant. However, HFrEF patients with LVAD have significant myocardial substrate for ventricular arrhythmias and the LVAD itself might be regarded as pro-arrhythmogenic. Aim of the current study was to investigate the mechanism of ventricular arrhythmias in LVAD patients and to provide evidence for the hypothesis that ad-hoc ablation/substrate modification during surgical LVAD implantation might reduce the risk of VT. We retrospectively analyzed invasive ablation procedures in patients with VT±LVAD and determined the mechanism of arrhythmia during electrophysiological examination (using 3D electroanatomical and local activation time mapping; Carto; Biosense Webster) in LVAD (n=17) and non-LVAD (n=12) subgroups. Mean age of the predominantly male (97%) patients was 60±2 years. VTs were directly LVAD associated (i.e. focal, adjacent to LVAD insertion or macro-reentry, around LVAD) in almost half of the LVAD patients. Number of radiofrequency ablation (RF) lesions and RF time were not significantly different between LVAD associated VT and non-LVAD associated VT patients. Within the LVAD patient group, freedom from VT (mean follow-up 40±6 months) was 50% upon ablation in patients with VTs originating from the LVAD region and 70% if ablation was conducted in non-LVAD regions. None of the LVAD associated and 22% of non-LVAD associated VT patients died during follow-up of these critically ill patients. Moreover, to reduce LVAD related arrhythmias and based on additional ex-vivo/in-silico derived data, we propose a distinctive (i.e. “star” shaped, LVAD encirclement) epicardial substrate modification during surgical LVAD implantation. In summary, a significant percentage of patients with LVAD exhibit LVAD-associated focal/macro-reentry VT and recurrence rates are high. VT likelihood is reduced ex-vivo/in-silico upon substrate modification targeting myocardium adjacent to a possible LVAD implantation site. Epicardial RF ablation during surgical LVAD implantation might allow prevention of LVAD-associated focal/macro-reentry VT. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding sources: Public grant(s) – National budget only. Main funding source(s): DFG

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