AI Article Synopsis

  • Dark-blood late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) is more effective than bright-blood LGE CMR for accurately defining ablation scars in the left atrium of patients undergoing atrial fibrillation ablation.
  • This study examined the optimal signal intensity threshold of dark-blood LGE CMR to identify these scars, utilizing image intensity ratios (IIRs) from 54 patients.
  • The results suggest an optimal IIR threshold of 1.09, with recommendations to use a range of 1.00 to 1.10 due to interpatient variability in detecting LA ablation scars.

Article Abstract

Background: Dark-blood late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) has better correlation with bipolar voltage (BiV) to define ablation scar in the left atrium (LA) compared to conventional bright-blood LGE CMR.

Objectives: This study sought to determine the optimal signal intensity threshold of dark-blood LGE CMR to identify LA ablation scar.

Methods: In 54 patients scheduled for atrial fibrillation ablation, image intensity ratios (IIRs) were derived from preprocedural dark-blood LGE CMR. In 26 patients without previous ablation, the upper limit of normal was derived from the 95th and 98th percentiles of pooled IIR values. In 28 patients with previous atrial fibrillation ablation, BiV was compared with the corresponding IIR. Receiver-operating characteristics analyses were employed to determine the optimal IIR threshold (ie, the point with the smallest distance to the upper left corner of the receiver-operating characteristics) for LA ablation scar (BiV ≤0.15 mV).

Results: Upper limit of normal corresponded to IIR values 1.16 and 1.21, yielding low sensitivities of 0.32 and 0.09 to detect LA ablation scar. Receiver-operating characteristics analysis of IIR and BiV comparison achieved a median area under the curve of 0.77. Median optimal IIR threshold for LA ablation scar was 1.09, with an average sensitivity of 0.73, specificity of 0.75, and accuracy of 0.71. Median IIR thresholds of 1.00 and 1.10 corresponded to 80% sensitivity and 80% specificity, respectively. There was considerable interpatient variability: optimal IIR thresholds per patient ranged from 1.01 to 1.22.

Conclusions: The optimal IIR threshold to identify LA ablation scar by dark-blood LGE CMR is 1.09. Because of interpatient variability, the investigators recommend using a lower (1.00) and upper (1.10) threshold to prevent over- or underestimation of ablation scar.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jacep.2024.05.017DOI Listing

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