Randomized comparison of atrioventricular node re-entry tachycardia and atrial flutter
catheter ablation with and without fluoroscopic guidance: ZeroFluoro study
Background Interventional cardiology procedures may expose patients and staff to considerable
radiation doses. We aimed to assess whether exposure to ionizing radiation during
catheter ablation of supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) can be completely avoided.
Methods In this prospective randomized study, patients with SVT (atrioventricular
re-entrant tachycardia n = 94, typical atrial flutter n = 29) were randomly assigned
in a 1:1 ratio to catheter ablation with conventional fluoroscopic guidance (CF group)
or with the EnSite Precision mapping system [zerofluoro (ZF) group]. Acute procedural
parameters, increased stochastic risk of cancer incidence and 6-month follow-up data
were assessed. Results Between May 2019 and August 2020, 123 patients were enrolled.
Clinical parameters were comparable. Median procedural time was 60.0 and 58.0 min,
median fluoroscopy time and estimated median effective dose were 240 s vs. 0 and 0.38
mSv vs. 0 and arrhythmia recurrence was 5% and 7.9% in the CF and ZF groups, respectively.
The acute success rate was 98.4% in both groups. No procedure-related complications
were reported. At an average age of 55.5 years and median radiation exposure of 0.38
mSv, the estimate of increased incidence was approximately 1 in 14 084. The estimated
mortality rate was 1 per 17 857 exposed persons. Conclusions The procedural safety
and efficacy of the zero-fluoroscopic approach are similar to those of conventional
fluoroscopy-based ablation for atrioventricular nodal re-entrant tachycardia and atrial
flutter. Under the assumption of low radiation dose, the excessive lifetime risk of
malignancy in the CF group due to electrophysiology procedure is reasonably small,
whilst totally reduced in zero fluoroscopy procedures.