Catheter ablation in congenital heart diseases: a French nationwide study.

Journal: European Heart Journal
Published:
Abstract

Objective: Current evidence on catheter ablation for patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) is derived from small, retrospective studies. This study aims to provide insights from a nationwide contemporary registry.

Methods: This prospective study included all CHD patients referred for catheter ablation from 2020 to July 2024 across 28 French centres. The primary outcome was the rate of per-procedural acute success. Secondary outcomes included complications as well as freedom from arrhythmia recurrence.

Results: A total of 1135 consecutive catheter ablation procedures were performed in 998 patients (mean age 46.1 ± 16 years, 55.5% male). The main primary clinical arrhythmias targeted were atrial flutter/tachycardia in 677 (59.6%), atrial fibrillation in 195 (17.2%), ventricular arrhythmia in 188 (16.6%), and atrioventricular reentrant tachycardia in 38 (3.3%), with significant variations in patterns observed based on the underlying substrate. Clinical arrhythmia was successfully ablated in 1071 patients (94.4%). The mean number of arrhythmias targeted per procedure was 1.5 ± 0.7, with overall acute success rates exceeding 90% for all arrhythmias except for ventricular arrhythmias (86.7%). Acute complication occurred in 43 procedures (3.8%), including 1 (0.1%) death. The overall 1- and 2-year recurrence-free rates were 77.3% (95% confidence interval 74.2%-80.4%) and 68.4% (95% confidence interval 64.7%-72.3%), respectively. Significant variations in recurrence rates were noted based on the type of arrhythmia and the underlying CHD.

Conclusions: Catheter ablation in patients with CHD demonstrates highly favourable acute outcomes and a low complication rate. Recurrence rates during follow-up vary depending on the targeted arrhythmia and the underlying CHD. These findings should be considered in the benefit-risk assessment.

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