Journal of Clinical Medicine (Feb 2022)

Impact of Contact Force-Sensing Catheters on Fluoroscopy Time in Interventional Electrophysiology: A European Survey

  • Lukas Fiedler,
  • Hermann Blessberger,
  • Pawel Balsam,
  • Tom De Potter,
  • Piotr Buchta,
  • Sabine Ernst,
  • Victor Waldmann,
  • Francisco Moscoso Costa,
  • Stefan Bogdan,
  • Alexander Nahler,
  • Denis Hrncic,
  • Thomas Lambert,
  • Robert Schönbauer,
  • Michael Pfeffer,
  • Franz Xaver Roithinger,
  • Clemens Steinwender,
  • Jedrzej Kosiuk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11051322
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. 1322

Abstract

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This multicenter European survey systematically evaluated the impact of using contact force-sensing catheters (CFSCs) on fluoroscopy and procedure time in interventional electrophysiology. Data from 25 participating centers were collected and analyzed, also considering important confounders. With the use of CFSCs, fluoroscopy time was reduced for right- and left-sided atrial ablations (median −6.4 to −9.6 min, p p < 0.001 for both groups), but not for left-sided atrial ablations. These findings were confirmed independent of career level and operator volume, except for very highly experienced electrophysiologists, in whom the effect was blunted. In the subset of pulmonary vein isolations (PVIs), CFSCs were shown to reduce both fluoroscopy and procedure time. In conclusion, the use of CFSCs was associated with a reduced fluoroscopy time for atrial ablations and an increased procedure time for right atrial and ventricular ablations. These effects were virtually independent of the operator experience and caseload. When considering only PVIs as an important subset, CFSCs were shown to reduce both fluoroscopy and procedure time.

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