Background: In recent years, catheter ablation has emerged as a sustainable, first-line therapy for the management of ventricular tachycardia (VT). Given the rise of the “obesity paradox” theory in atrial ablation outcomes, we sought to study the effect of BMI on patients undergoing structural VT ablation. Purpose: To assess the outcomes of VT ablation, specifically VT recurrence, in patients with elevated vs. normal BMI. Methods: Clinical characteristics and demographic data were collected for VT patients who underwent ablation at Mayo Clinic Rochester from 2012-2022. Patient BMI was classified as non-obese (<30 kg/m2), obese (30-40 kg/m2), and morbidly obese (≥40 kg/m2). The endpoint was a composite of initial monomorphic VT recurrence and repeat ablation after adjusting for age, sex, and comorbidities. Results: A total of 399 patients underwent 508 ablations. 51.4% of ablations had a BMI <30, 39.2% were between 30-40, and 9.4% were ≥40. There was a greater prevalence of hypertension and type 2 diabetes mellitus in morbidly obese patients (p <0.01). Morbidly obese individuals also had a significantly increased rate of general anesthesia during ablation and long VT cycle lengths. The Kaplan-Meier curve demonstrates no statistically significant differences in time to VT recurrence among the three BMI groups (p = 0.324). Neither morbid-obesity (aHR= 1.20; CI = 0.94-1.56, p = 0.14) nor nonmorbid-obesity (aHR = 0.92; CI = 0.76-1.10, p = 0.4), compared to non-obesity was a significant independent predictor of VT recurrence or repeat ablation on multivariate regression after adjusting for age, sex and comorbidities. Conclusion: There was no significant association between BMI groups and VT recurrence or repeat ablation, and no difference in complications. We did not find the obesity paradox to be relevant for VT ablation in our patient population. Further study would be needed with larger samples to corroborate these findings.
Read full abstract