4.5 Article

Prospective Assessment of an Automated Intraprocedural 12-Lead ECG-Based System for Localization of Early Left Ventricular Activation

Journal

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCEP.119.008262

Keywords

arrhythmias; catheter ablation; electrocardiography; electrophysiology; human; ventricular tachycardia

Funding

  1. Department of Medicine (DoM) of Dalhousie University
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01HL142496]
  3. Maritime Heart Centre Research Grant
  4. Cardiac Arrhythmia Network of Canada Fellowship
  5. Heart Rhythm Society Research Fellowship

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Background: To facilitate ablation of ventricular tachycardia (VT), an automated localization system to identify the site of origin of left ventricular activation in real time using the 12-lead ECG was developed. The objective of this study was to prospectively assess its accuracy. Methods: The automated site of origin localization system consists of 3 steps: (1) localization of ventricular segment based on population templates, (2) population-based localization within a segment, and (3) patient-specific site localization. Localization error was assessed by the distance between the known reference site and the estimated site. Results: In 19 patients undergoing 21 catheter ablation procedures of scar-related VT, site of origin localization accuracy was estimated using 552 left ventricular endocardial pacing sites pooled together and 25 VT-exit sites identified by contact mapping. For the 25 VT-exit sites, localization error of the population-based localization steps was within 10 mm. Patient-specific site localization achieved accuracy of within 3.5 mm after including up to 11 pacing (training) sites. Using 3 remotes (67.8 +/- 17.0 mm from the reference VT-exit site), and then 5 close pacing sites, resulted in localization error of 7.2 +/- 4.1 mm for the 25 identified VT-exit sites. In 2 emulated clinical procedure with 2 induced VTs, the site of origin localization system achieved accuracy within 4 mm. Conclusions: In this prospective validation study, the automated localization system achieved estimated accuracy within 10 mm and could thus provide clinical utility.

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