Although the presence of a thrombus contraindicates left atrial appendage closure procedure (LAAC), a previous study reported the feasibility of the thrombus trapping procedure (TTP) technique to ...overcome this limitation.
This study aimed to analyse the short-term outcomes in a series of patients who underwent LAAC using the TTP (TTP-LAAC).
This retrospective series included patients who underwent TTP-LAAC between January 2018 and May 2020 in 13 European centres. Device choice, pre-interventional work-up and post-discharge antithrombotic therapy regimens were left to the discretion of the operators. The primary endpoint was the 30-day occurrence of stroke, systemic embolism or cardiovascular death.
During the study period, a total of 1,918 patients underwent LAAC. A thrombus was identified in 71 cases but completely disappeared in 24 patients before procedure. TTP-LAAC was finally performed in 53 cases (3%). Thrombi were identified ahead of the actual day of implantation in 47 patients (87%) and were mostly limited in size (50 cases with extension <50% of the LAA surface). The Amplatzer Amulet and WATCHMAN FLX occluders were implanted in 44 and 9 patients, respectively. A single deployment approach was applied in 70% and a cerebral embolic protection system was used in 9% of the patients. The overall success rate was 100%. Small pericardial effusion without tamponade was observed in 6% of the cases. Patients were discharged with 72% under antiplatelet therapy and 10% under short-term oral anticoagulation. The primary endpoint occurred in one patient.
TTP-LAAC might be used in a minority of LAAC procedures but appears to be feasible and safe in the short-term, in select cases.
Introduction
In cardiac resynchronization therapy, pacing the left ventricle (LV) at sites of prolonged electrical delay is associated with better outcomes. We sought to characterize the ...interrelationships between intrinsic, right‐ventricular (RV)‐paced, and LV‐paced interventricular delays.
Methods and Results
The following electrical timings were measured at implantation for all electrodes of the LV quadripolar leads: QLV, interventricular delay in intrinsic rhythm (RVs‐LVs), in RV‐paced rhythm (RVp‐LVs), and in LV‐paced rhythm (LVp‐RVs). We included 32 patients (78% men, age 72 years, LV ejection fraction 29%, left bundle branch block 84%). QLV and RVs‐LVs were correlated (R2 = .72, p < .0001), as were RVs‐LVs and RVp‐LVs (R2 = .27, p = .002) and RVp‐LVs and LVp‐RVs (R2 = .60, p < .001). Direction of activation along the four LV lead electrodes was concordant between RVs‐LVs and RVp‐LVs in only 17 (53%) patients. The latest‐activated electrodes in RVs‐LVs and RVp‐LVs were concordant in 26 (81%) patients, adjacent in 3 (9%) patients, and remote in 3 (9%) patients. Biventricular‐paced QRS duration varied by more than 10 ms between the two electrodes in half of the patients with dissimilar latest electrodes. Among the seven echocardiographic nonresponders at 6 months, the programmed electrode was remote from the latest electrode in RVs‐LVs in five patients and in RVp‐LVs in three patients.
Conclusion
Intrinsic and RV‐paced interventricular electrical delays are correlated, but there is substantial heterogeneity between patients. The latest‐activated electrode may be different between RVs‐LVs and RVp‐LVs, and this might have important implications in selecting the optimal LV vector.
Purpose Pheochromocytomas/paragangliomas (PHEOs/PGLs) overexpress ă somatostatin receptors and recent studies have already shown excellent ă results in the localization of these tumors using ...Ga-68-labeled ă somatostatin analogs (Ga-68-DOTA-SSA), especially in patients with ă germline succinate dehydrogenase subunit B gene (SDHB) mutations and ă head and neck PGLs (HNPGLs). The value of Ga-68-DOTA-SSA has to be ă established in sporadic cases, including PHEOs. Thus, the aim of this ă study was to compare Ga-68-DOTATATE PET/CT, F-18-FDOPA PET/CT, and ă conventional imaging in patients with various PHEOs/PGLs with a special ă emphasis on sporadic cases, including those located in the adrenal ă gland. ă Design Ga-68-DOTATATE, F-18-FDOPA PET/CT, and conventional imaging ă (contrast-enhanced CT and MRI with MR angiography sequences) were ă prospectively performed in 30 patients (8 with SDHD mutations, 1 with a ă MAX mutation and 21 sporadic cases) with PHEO/PGL at initial diagnosis ă or relapse. ă Results The patient-based sensitivities were 93 % (28/30), 97 % ă (29/30), and 93 % (28/30) for Ga-68-DOTATATE PET/CT, F-18-FDOPA PET/CT, ă and conventional imaging, respectively. The lesion-based sensitivities ă were 93 % (43/46), 89 % (41/46), and 76 % (35/46) for Ga-68-DOTATATE ă PET/CT, F-18-FDOPA PET/CT, and conventional imaging respectively (p = ă 0.042). Ga-68-DOTATATE PET/CT detected a higher number of HNPGLs (30/30) ă than F-18-FDOPA PET/CT (26/30; p = 0.112) and conventional imaging ă (24/30; p = 0.024). Ga-68-DOTATATE PET/CT missed two PHEOs of a few ă millimeters in size and a large recurrent PHEO. One lesion was ă considered false-positive on Ga-68-DOTATATE PET/CT and corresponded to a ă typical focal lesion of fibrous dysplasia on MRI. Among the 11 lesions ă missed by conventional imaging, 7 were detected by conventional imaging ă with knowledge of the PET results (4 HNPGLs, 2 LNs, and 1 recurrent ă PHEO). ă Conclusion Ga-68-DOTATATE PET/CT is the most sensitive tool in the ă detection of HNPGLs, especially SDHD-related tumors, which may be very ă small and fail to concentrate sufficient F-18-FDOPA. The present study ă further expands the use of Ga-68-DOTATATE for all patients with HNPGLs, ă regardless of their genotype. Ga-68-DOTATATE PET/CT may be inferior to ă F-18-FDOPA PET/CT in the detection PHEOs.
OBJECTIVE:To report long-term follow-up of patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1) and nonfunctioning pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (NF-PET).
BACKGROUND:Pancreaticoduodenal tumors ...occur in almost all patients with MEN1 and are a major cause of death. The natural history and clinical outcome are poorly defined, and management is still controversial for small NF-PET.
METHODS:Clinical outcome and tumor progression were analyzed in 46 patients with MEN1 with 2 cm or smaller NF-PET who did not have surgery at the time of initial diagnosis. Survival data were analyzed using the Kaplan-Meier method.
RESULTS:Forty-six patients with MEN1 were followed prospectively for 10.7 ± 4.2 (mean ± standard deviation) years. One patient was lost to follow-up and 1 died from a cause unrelated to MEN1. Twenty-eight patients had stable disease and 16 showed significant progression of pancreaticoduodenal involvement, indicated by increase in size or number of tumors, development of a hypersecretion syndrome, need for surgery (7 patients), and death from metastatic NF-PET (1 patient). The mean event-free survival was 13.9 ± 1.1 years after NF-PET diagnosis. At last follow-up, none of the living patients who had undergone surgery or follow-up had evidence of metastases on imaging studies.
CONCLUSIONS:Our study shows that conservative management for patients with MEN1 with NF-PET of 2 cm or smaller is associated with a low risk of disease-specific mortality. The decision to recommend surgery to prevent tumor spread should be balanced with operative mortality and morbidity, and patients should be informed about the risk-benefit ratio of conservative versus aggressive management when the NF-PET represents an intermediate risk.
Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 (MEN2) is a rare hereditary syndrome due to mutations of the proto-oncogene REarranged during Transfection (RET), defined by the association of medullary thyroid ...carcinoma (MTC) in almost 100% cases, and pheochromocytoma in roughly 50% (primary hyperparathyroidism can be seen in 10–20% of patients with MEN2A). Early thyroidectomy and the efficacy of novel tyrosine kinase inhibitors modified the natural history of MTC, with possibilities of cure or long-term control. The second main compound, pheochromocytoma, is reported with a variable penetrance, from 10 to 80% cases, depending on the mutation of
RET
. Pheochromocytoma constitutes the main disease to screen in patients with
RET
mutations. Pheochromocytoma clinical and biochemical diagnosis, as well as the way to treat it are thus crucial. This review will thus focus on the epidemiological specificities of MEN2-related pheochromocytoma, the genotype/phenotype relationship, the modern imaging modalities necessary to confirm the diagnosis in this hereditary context, as well as the optimal management and the possibilities of adrenal sparing surgery. Additional information will include the natural history of MEN2B-pheochromocytoma, the rare cases of malignant pheochromocytoma, and the factors that could modify the penetrance between individuals carrying the same mutation, especially in the same family.
Background
Despite significant advances in imaging and genetics, as well as surgical and anesthetic innovations, morbidity in pheochromocytoma surgery remains significant. The aim of this study was ...to identify the predictive factors of global and cardiovascular morbidity following unilateral laparoscopic adrenalectomy for pheochromocytoma.
Methods
We conducted a retrospective study from a unicentric cohort. All patients who underwent non-converted laparoscopic unilateral adrenalectomy for pheochromocytoma between 2000 and 2017 were included. Our patients did not systematically benefit from preoperative pharmacological preparation. It is to be noted that they never received alpha-blockers. Preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative data during follow-ups were collected. Univariate and multivariate analyses by logistic regression were performed.
Results
A total of 134 patients were included. Fifty-three percent of patients did not receive preoperative pharmacological preparation (PPP) and 33% neither preoperative antihypertensives nor PPP before surgery. There was no postoperative mortality. The global morbidity was 13.4%, while cardiovascular morbidity was 4.5%. The main factors associated with global morbidity were preoperative diuretics, a medical history of stroke, and the need for pressor amines postoperatively. The main factor associated with cardiovascular morbidity was the need for pressor amines postoperatively. Predictive factors of postoperative need for pressor amines for hypotension were the tumor size, preoperative beta-blockers, and/or diuretics.
Conclusion
In this large cohort of patients, our data revealed no mortality and low global and cardiovascular morbidity rates, showing that pheochromocytoma surgery without systematic PPP and even without preoperative antihypertensives is feasible and safe for selected patients. Our data also highlight the need for a good preoperative evaluation of the patient and the tumor, in order to optimize treatments and to help the detection of high-risk patients. This also allows us to better prevent and anticipate their possible complications.
Background
Atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation outcome is still operator dependent. Ablation Index (AI) is a new lesion quality marker that has been demonstrated to allow acute durable pulmonary vein ...(PV) isolation followed by a high single‐procedure arrhythmia‐free survival.
This prospective, multicenter study was designed to evaluate the reproducibility of acute PV isolation guided by the AI.
Methods
A total of 490 consecutive patients with paroxysmal (80.4%) and persistent AF underwent first time PV encircling and were divided in four study groups according to operator preference in choosing the ablation catheter (a contact force ST or contact force surround flow STSF catheter) and the AI setting (330 at posterior and 450 at anterior wall or 380 at posterior and 500 at anterior wall). Radiofrequency was delivered targeting interlesion distance ≤6 mm.
Results
The rate of first‐pass PV isolation (ST330 90 ± 16%, ST380 87 ± 19%, STSF330 90 ± 17%, STSF380 91 ± 15%, P = .585) was similar among the four study groups, whereas procedure (ST330 129 ± 44 minutes, ST380 144 ± 44 minutes, STSF330 120 ± 72 minutes, STSF380 125 ± 73 minutes, P < .001) and fluoroscopy time (ST330 542 ± 285 seconds, ST380 540 ± 416 seconds, STSF330 257 ± 356 seconds, STSF380 379 ± 454 seconds, P < 0.001) significantly differed. The difference in the rate of first‐pass isolation was not statistical different (P = .06) among the 12 operators that performed at least 15 procedures.
Conclusions
An ablation protocol respecting strict criteria for contiguity and quality lesion results in high and comparable rate of acute PV isolation among operator performing ablation with different catheters, AI settings, procedure, and fluoroscopy times.
Objective To determine the association between surgeons’ experience and postoperative complications in thyroid surgery.Design Prospective cross sectional multicentre study.Setting High volume ...referral centres in five academic hospitals in France.Participants All patients who underwent a thyroidectomy undertaken by every surgeon in these hospitals from 1 April 2008 to 31 December 2009.Main outcome measures Presence of two permanent major complications (recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy or hypoparathyroidism), six months after thyroid surgery. We used mixed effects logistic regression to determine the association between length of experience and postoperative complications. Results 28 surgeons completed 3574 thyroid procedures during a one year period. Overall rates of recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy and hypoparathyroidism were 2.08% (95% confidence interval 1.53% to 2.67%) and 2.69% (2.10% to 3.31%), respectively. In a multivariate analysis, 20 years or more of practice was associated with increased probability of both recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy (odds ratio 3.06 (1.07 to 8.80), P=0.04) and hypoparathyroidism (7.56 (1.79 to 31.99), P=0.01). Surgeons’ performance had a concave association with their length of experience (P=0.036) and age (P=0.035); surgeons aged 35 to 50 years had better outcomes than their younger and older colleagues.Conclusions Optimum individual performance in thyroid surgery cannot be passively achieved or maintained by accumulating experience. Factors contributing to poor performance in very experienced surgeons should be explored further.