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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2006 May;27(10):1223-9.
doi: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehi834. Epub 2006 Apr 13.

Radiofrequency ablation of arrhythmias guided by non-fluoroscopic catheter location: a prospective randomized trial

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Radiofrequency ablation of arrhythmias guided by non-fluoroscopic catheter location: a prospective randomized trial

Mark J Earley et al. Eur Heart J. 2006 May.

Abstract

Aims: To compare the utility of non-fluoroscopic mapping systems (Carto and Ensite NavX) with that of conventional mapping in patients referred for catheter ablation of a wide variety of arrhythmias.

Methods and results: Patients referred for catheter ablation (excluding atrial fibrillation, atypical atrial flutter, ventricular tachycardia in structural heart disease, and complete AV nodal ablation) were randomized equally to a procedure guided by Carto, Ensite NavX, or conventional mapping. A total of 145 patients were recruited (82 men, aged 49+/-16, range 18-85). In 19 patients, no ablation was performed, and in the remaining, typical atrial flutter, atrioventricular nodal re-entrant tachycardia, and atrioventricular re-entrant tachycardias [including Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW)] accounted for 93% of ablations. Overall procedure time, immediate and short-term success, complication rate, and freedom from symptoms at follow-up were identical for all groups. NavX led to the least X-ray exposure: Navx vs. conventional, median (range): 4 (0-50) vs. 13 (2-46) min (P<0.001); NavX vs. Carto, median (range): 4 (0-50) vs. 6 (1-55) min (P=0.008). Both Carto and NavX increased disposable costs by 50% when compared with conventional (P<0.001). For typical atrial flutter, Carto and NavX reduced screening times without increasing procedure cost. If ablation was not performed, NavX was twice as expensive as Carto or conventional.

Conclusion: Ensite NavX and Carto procedures have similar effectiveness and safety to a conventional approach; however, they both reduce X-ray exposure, with NavX producing a significantly greater effect than Carto. Although this benefit is achieved at a greater financial cost, there may be long-term benefits to catheter laboratory staff.

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