BackgroundPatients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot are at risk of ventricular tachycardia (VT) and sudden cardiac death. Most VTs arise from 5 slowly conducting anatomic isthmuses (SCAIs; conduction velocity ≤0.5 m/s) bound by the right ventriculotomy, ventricular septal defect patch, and tricuspid and pulmonic valves. Historically, risk stratification electrophysiologic studies involved programmed ventricular stimulation with VT induction guiding implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) implantation or VT ablation. ObjectiveThis study aimed to evaluate a “prophylactic” strategy of ablating SCAIs even in the absence of inducible VT to reduce ICD implantation and arrhythmic events and to compare this with the “historical” strategy. MethodsThis was a single-center, retrospective cohort study. The historical cohort underwent programmed ventricular stimulation to guide ICD implantation or VT ablation. The prophylactic cohort underwent right ventricular electroanatomic mapping and ablation of SCAIs. A composite end point of arrhythmic death, cardiac arrest, sustained VT, and ICD complication was compared between the cohorts. ResultsNinety-two patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot had risk stratification electrophysiologic studies. Of 57 prophylactic patients, SCAIs were identified or ablated in 33 (58%), 16 (28%) had inducible VT before ablation, and 1 received ICD. Of 35 historical patients, 15 (43%) had inducible VT; 3 had cryoablation during pulmonic valve replacement and 11 received ICDs. No prophylactic patients met the composite end point during a median 21 months (interquartile range, 8–35 months) vs 10 (29%) historical patients during a median 125 months (interquartile range, 90–142 months; P = .017). There were no ablation-related complications. ConclusionProphylactic SCAI ablation is associated with fewer ICD implantations and a reduction in incident arrhythmic events without ablation-related complications.
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