The US4ABL Strategy: A Systematic Ultrasound-Guided Approach for Left Atrial and Ventricular Ablation Procedures

J Clin Med. 2024 Dec 27;14(1):103. doi: 10.3390/jcm14010103.

Abstract

Background: The safety and efficacy of electrophysiological (EP) procedures using ultrasound (US) guidance are being increasingly studied. We investigated if a systematic workflow with ultrasound guidance (the US4ABL), comprising four steps (transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) for left atrial thrombus exclusion, US of the groin vessels to guide femoral access, TEE-aided transseptal puncture, and transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) for exclusion of pericardial tamponade after the procedure), reduces the number of complications and fluoroscopy duration and dose. Methods: A total of 212 consecutive patients underwent left-sided ablations using the US4ABL workflow and were compared to a group of 299 patients who underwent the same type of ablations using post-procedural TTE to exclude tamponade (standard group: venous and/or arterial access by palpation and fluoroscopy, and pressure guided transseptal puncture). Complications, procedural duration, fluoroscopy duration, and dose were compared. Results: The cohort included 511 patients (42% female); 43.8% of patients suffered from paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF), 35.4% presented with persistent AF, 10.7% underwent the procedure was for atrial tachycardia, and 10% of patients had premature ventricular contractions. The complication rate in the US4ABL group was lower compared to the standard group: 0 complications vs. 11 complications (3.7%, mainly vascular and pericardial), respectively (p = 0.005). The procedure times were lower in the US4ABL group (p < 0.01), whereas the fluoroscopy time and dose did not differ significantly. Conclusions: A fully ultrasound-guided (US4ABL) workflow for left atrial and ventricular electrophysiology procedures reduces the complication rate and the procedure time.

Keywords: US4ABL; ablation; complication; ultrasound.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.