Clinical Utility and Validation of the Rhythmia Mapping System for the Treatment of Cardiac Arrhythmias
Description
Despite the advancement in catheter ablation technology over the past decade, the essential step in therapy entails identification and accurate mapping of the arrhythmia mechanism and its anatomical substrate. These are performed with the assistance of mapping systems and catheters able to record high fidelity local electrical activity of the heart (electrogram, EGM) and display it in three-dimensional views. Current mapping systems are limited by slow and incomplete arrhythmia mapping, limiting successful therapies.
The Rhythmia™ Mapping System (Rhythmia), including its novel basket catheter (IntellaMap Orion™ High Resolution Mapping Catheter), is an FDA approved mapping system available for use during clinical, standard of care electrophysiology procedures at BIDMC. Its unique design allows improved mapping resolution of cardiac arrhythmias, particularly those with complex disease substrate, such as atrial and ventricular tachycardias. Specifically, the investigators plan to enroll patients undergoing electrophysiology study and ablation for atrial flutter/fibrillation, atrial tachycardia and ventricular tachycardia. The system was developed to provide high-resolution maps based on the rapid, automated acquisition of a very large number of low noise electrograms. This mapping system was designed to improve the speed and clinical outcomes over other systems that do not have this rapid automated acquisition capability.
The Rhythmia mapping system is FDA approved and will be made available for use in clinical procedures at BIDMC. Rhythmia will be installed in one of the three electrophysiology labs at BIDMC and the use of the system is at the discretion of the electrophysiologist performing the procedure. Thus, using or not using the Rhythmia system to guide arrhythmia mapping and ablation is not a deviation from the standard of care.
The goal of this registry study is to examine the clinical utility of the system to create accurate electroanatomical maps and validate the data acquired by comparing it with historical cohorts of electroanatomical signals and their corresponding maps created with the traditional Carto®3 electroanatomic mapping system (Biosense Webster, Inc).
Patients will only be approached for enrollment when the treating physician has elected to utilize the Rhythmia mapping system during the standard clinical procedure. The data acquired will be collected by a member of the research team in a clinical registry for offline analysis.
The aim/hypotheses tested by this study include:
The Rhythmia mapping system will result in the creation of accurate, high resolution 3D electroanatomical maps, defined as the ability to successfully map the arrhythmia circuit (yes/no) and ablate the arrhythmia (yes/no).
The time to create an electroanatomical map with the Rhythmia mapping system will be significantly shorter than in historical cohorts using the traditional Carto®3 system.