4.6 Article

Optimization of anti-tachycardia pacing efficacy through scar-specific delivery and minimization of re-initiation: a virtual study on a cohort of infarcted porcine hearts

Journal

EUROPACE
Volume 25, Issue 2, Pages 716-725

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/europace/euac165

Keywords

Anti-tachycardia pacing; Cardiac resynchronization therapy; Implantable cardioverter defibrillator; Patient-specific modelling; Ventricular tachycardia

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This study aims to compare the efficacy of anti-tachycardia pacing (ATP) delivered at different locations relative to the re-entrant circuit and optimize ATP by minimizing re-initiation. The results show that ATP is more effective at terminating fast ventricular tachycardia (VT) when delivered proximal to the re-entrant circuit, while attenuating re-initiation through an early termination detection algorithm improves the overall efficacy for all VTs.
Aims Anti-tachycardia pacing (ATP) is a reliable electrotherapy to painlessly terminate ventricular tachycardia (VT). However, ATP is often ineffective, particularly for fast VTs. The efficacy may be enhanced by optimized delivery closer to the re-entrant circuit driving the VT. This study aims to compare ATP efficacy for different delivery locations with respect to the re-entrant circuit, and further optimize ATP by minimizing failure through re-initiation. Methods and results Seventy-three sustained VTs were induced in a cohort of seven infarcted porcine ventricular computational models, largely dominated by a single re-entrant pathway. The efficacy of burst ATP delivered from three locations proximal to the re-entrant circuit (septum) and three distal locations (lateral/posterior left ventricle) was compared. Re-initiation episodes were used to develop an algorithm utilizing correlations between successive sensed electrogram morphologies to automatically truncate ATP pulse delivery. Anti-tachycardia pacing was more efficacious at terminating slow compared with fast VTs (65 vs. 46%, P = 0.000039). A separate analysis of slow VTs showed that the efficacy was significantly higher when delivered from distal compared with proximal locations (distal 72%, proximal 59%), being reversed for fast VTs (distal 41%, proximal 51%). Application of our early termination detection algorithm (ETDA) accurately detected VT termination in 79% of re-initiated cases, improving the overall efficacy for proximal delivery with delivery inside the critical isthmus (CI) itself being overall most effective. Conclusion Anti-tachycardia pacing delivery proximal to the re-entrant circuit is more effective at terminating fast VTs, but less so slow VTs, due to frequent re-initiation. Attenuating re-initiation, through ETDA, increases the efficacy of delivery within the CI for all VTs.

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