Catheter ablation reduces ventricular tachycardia burden in patients with arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy: insights from a north-western French multicentre registry
EP Europace Journal

Abstract
Studies assessing radiofrequency ablation (RFA) of ventricular tachycardia (VT) in arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) report VT recurrences, but have not evaluated the impact of RFA on relevant clinical events during follow-up. We aimed to investigate relevant RFA outcomes in a multicentric registry.
This study included 49 patients with ARVC (46 with definite diagnosis, 3 with borderline diagnosis according to revised Task Force Criteria) who underwent 92 RFA procedures (83 endocardial, 9 combined endo–epicardial) between 1999–2015. Ventricular tachycardia recurrences and VT burden were assessed after each procedure or after the last RFA. Over a mean follow-up of 64 ± 51 months, VT-free survival was 37% at 1 year, 19% at 5 years, and 14% at 10 years. Ventricular tachycardia burden was significantly reduced after one procedure (23 vs. 11 VT episodes/year,
RFA was predominantly targeted at the endocardial surface. Ventricular tachycardia recurrences were common, but few ARVC patients experienced major clinical events during follow-up. Further studies should investigate the benefit of extensive substrate ablation combined with endo–epicardial strategies.
Contributors

Stéphane Boulé
Author

Jean-Sylvain Hermida
Author

Alexandre Doucy
Author

Philippe Mabo
Author

Dominique Pavin
Author

Frédéric Anselme
Author

Nathanaël Auquier
Author

Sandro Ninni
Author

Augustin Coisne
Author

François Brigadeau
Author

Valérie Deken-Delannoy
Author

Didier Klug
Author

Dominique Lacroix
Author
