Similar outcomes with manual contact force ablation catheters and traditional catheters in the treatment of outflow tract premature ventricular complexes
EP Europace Journal

Abstract
Unlike in atrial fibrillation ablation, there is a lack of appropriately sized and properly designed studies regarding outflow tract (OT) premature ventricular complex (PVC) ablation outcomes with contact force sensing (CFS) catheters. We aimed to compare the acute success-, complication-, and long-term recurrence rates of manual CFS catheters with traditional irrigated catheters (T) in OT PVC ablation.
Single-centre, propensity-matched data of 75–75 patients ablated for right-sided OT (RVOT) or left-sided OT (LVOT) PVCs in 2015–17 with CFS or T catheters were compared. Acute success rate, peri-procedural complications, post-procedural daily PVC burden, and long-term recurrence rates were compared on intention-to-treat basis. Acute success rate equalled 80% in both groups, with no difference in force values in the CFS group comparing successful or failed cases [12.0 (8.75–17.0) vs. 16.0 (10.25–22.25) g,
Both types of catheters can effectively reduce OT PVC burden with minimal serious complication rates. Ablation with CFS or T catheters gives similar acute- and long-term results.
Contributors

Pál Ábrahám
Author

Mercédesz Ambrus
Author

Szilvia Herczeg
Author

Nándor Szegedi
Author

Klaudia Vivien Nagy
Author

Zoltán Salló
Author

István Osztheimer
Author

Gábor Széplaki
Author

Tamás Tahin
Author

Béla Merkely
Author

László Gellér
Author
