BMJ Surgery, Interventions, & Health Technologies (Oct 2021)

Feasibility of using real-world data in the evaluation of cardiac ablation catheters: a test-case of the National Evaluation System for Health Technology Coordinating Center

  • Daniel J Friedman,
  • Joseph S Ross,
  • Sanket S Dhruva,
  • Nilay D Shah,
  • Joseph G Akar,
  • Shumin Zhang,
  • Yue Yu,
  • Guoqian Jiang,
  • Amit A Doshi,
  • Eric Brandt,
  • Jiajing Chen,
  • Keondae R Ervin,
  • Kimberly Collison Farr,
  • Paul Coplan,
  • Peter A. Noseworthy,
  • Thomas Forsyth,
  • Wade L Schulz,
  • Joseph P Drozda, Jr.

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjsit-2021-000089
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1

Abstract

Read online

Objectives To determine the feasibility of using real-world data to assess the safety and effectiveness of two cardiac ablation catheters for the treatment of persistent atrial fibrillation and ischaemic ventricular tachycardia.Design Retrospective cohort.Setting Three health systems in the USA.Participants Patients receiving ablation with the two ablation catheters of interest at any of the three health systems.Main outcome measures Feasibility of identifying the medical devices and participant populations of interest as well as the duration of follow-up and positive predictive values (PPVs) for serious safety (ischaemic stroke, acute heart failure and cardiac tamponade) and effectiveness (arrhythmia-related hospitalisation) clinical outcomes of interest compared with manual chart validation by clinicians.Results Overall, the catheter of interest for treatment of persistent atrial fibrillation was used for 4280 ablations and the catheter of interest for ischaemic ventricular tachycardia was used 1516 times across the data available within the three health systems. The duration of patient follow-up in the three health systems ranged from 91% to 97% at ≥7 days, 89% to 96% at ≥30 days, 77% to 90% at ≥6 months and 66% to 84% at ≥1 year. PPVs were 63.4% for ischaemic stroke, 96.4% for acute heart failure, 100% at one health system for cardiac tamponade and 55.7% for arrhythmia-related hospitalisation.Conclusions It is feasible to use real-world health system data to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of cardiac ablation catheters, though evaluations must consider the implications of variation in follow-up and endpoint ascertainment among health systems.