Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
To assess factors associated with safety and efficacy of catheter ablation using direct current or radiofrequency energy for the management of patients with drug and/or pacemaker resistant cardiac arrhythmias.
BACKGROUND:
Cardiac tachyarrhythmias that are refractory to either conventional or experimental
antiarrhythmic therapy, antitachycardia pacemakers, or both, may result in serious symptoms
or death. Catheter ablation has been developed as a nonpharmacologic, closed-chest
alternative for the management of these patients. The technique was first applied to man in
1981 and reported by both Scheinman et al and Gallagher et al in 1982. Hartzler reported the
first catheter ablation procedure for the treatment of ventricular tachycardia in 1983. In
that same year, Weber reported the first use of catheter ablation of an accessory
atrioventricular pathway. The standard method of energy delivery for closed-chest catheter
ablation attempts involved direct current delivered using a defibrillator, but beginning in
1985, radiofrequency energy was employed in man. This promised to revolutionize the field of
catheter ablation, because it offered the hope of more precise destruction of tissue,
avoided the need for general anesthesia and significantly lowered complication rates, since
it did not involve the levels of energy used in direct current attempts.
The Catheter Ablation Registry (CAR) evolved from a pilot study, the Percutaneous Cardiac
Mapping and Ablation Registry (PCMAR) formed in 1983. There were scientific limitations in
this voluntary registry. Further prospective studies were needed to better define this
procedure, and a multicenter international prospective cohort study was designed to allow a
rapid assessment of ablation's dangers and potential usefulness. Results from the study were
used to guide physicians as to which patients would and would not benefit from these new
procedures.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
Data were collected prospectively from sixteen clinical centers in the United States and
Europe on attempted catheter ablation of the atrioventricular junction, accessory
atrioventricular pathways and ventricular tachycardia. Each of the three ablation techniques
was studied as a separate subset and the two methods of energy delivery, direct current or
radiofrequency energy, were compared within each subset. A standardized protocol was used
for direct current ablation and the results of a variety of protocols for the other two
procedures and for radiofrequency energy were observed. Patients were evaluated quarterly in
the first post-procedure year, and biannually for the subsequent duration of the study.
Statistical analyses were performed to determine the distribution of specific patient
characteristics such as age, sex, clinical status, underlying heart disease, and a variety
of procedural categories including energy level, mapping data, and catheter position. A
determination was made of the frequency of successful outcomes including cessation of
arrhythmias, production of third degree atrioventricular block, and disappearance of
symptoms and of adverse effects, including procedure-related complications and death.
The study completion date listed in this record was obtained from the "End Date" entered in
the Protocol Registration and Results System (PRS) record.
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