# Catheter Ablation of Right Ventricular Endocavitary Arrhythmias

**Authors:** Ikram U. Haq, Fatima M. Ezzeddine, Nader Al-Shakarchi, Samuel J. Asirvatham, Freddy Del-Carpio Munoz, Abhishek J. Deshmukh, Christopher V. DeSimone, Paul A. Friedman, Gurukripa N. Kowlgi, Malini Madhavan, Peter A. Noseworthy, Suraj Kapa, Konstantinos C. Siontis, Nicholas Y. Tan, Alan Sugrue, Ammar M. Killu

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.jacadv.2025.101985 · 2025-07-17

## TL;DR

This study examines the characteristics and outcomes of catheter ablation for arrhythmias in the right ventricle, showing it is effective in most patients.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the clinical features and ablation outcomes of right ventricular endocavitary arrhythmias.

## Key findings

- Most patients had structurally normal hearts and ablation was effective in 89% with reduced medication use.
- PVCs triggering ventricular fibrillation had shorter coupling intervals and originated from the lateral moderator band.
- Ablation did not lead to right ventricular dysfunction or worsened tricuspid valve function.

## Abstract

Right ventricular (RV) endocavitary arrhythmias remain poorly characterized.

The purpose of this study was to define the clinical presentation, ablation outcomes, and long-term prognosis of RV endocavitary arrhythmias.

Among 3,873 patients undergoing ventricular arrhythmia ablation between 2013 and 2025, 53 (1.4%) were included (mean age 45.4 ± 16.9 years, 64% male, mean left ventricular ejection fraction 54 ± 11%).

Forty-three (81%) had structurally normal hearts and 10 (19%) had nonischemic cardiomyopathy, including 7 with premature ventricular contraction (PVC)-mediated cardiomyopathy and 3 with idiopathic nonischemic cardiomyopathy. Ablation indications included PVCs (n = 25), PVC-triggered ventricular fibrillation (VF) (n = 20), and ventricular tachycardia (n = 8). PVC QRS duration independently predicted developing PVC-mediated cardiomyopathy (P = 0.02). PVCs-triggering VF had shorter coupling intervals (CIs) (320 [295-358] vs 440 [400-470] ms; P < 0.05) and more frequently originated at the lateral moderator band (MB) (P = 0.03), where they also had shorter CIs than medial MB PVCs (P = 0.01). Ablation targets included the MB (n = 47), anterior papillary muscle (PM) (n = 3), inferior PM (n = 2), and conus PM (n = 1). Postablation increase in sinus rhythm QRS duration (98 [84-102] to 102 [90-114] ms; P < 0.01), V1 intrinsicoid deflection (22 [18-27] to 26 [20-95] ms; P < 0.01), and new right bundle branch block (15% of patients) did not translate into RV dysfunction or worsening tricuspid valve function. Radiofrequency energy was used in 49 patients, adjunctive cryoablation in 6, and cryoablation alone in 4. At 3.6 (1.6–5.7) years follow-up, 89% achieved clinical success with reduced antiarrhythmic drug use.

RV endocavitary arrhythmias typically occur in structurally normal hearts as focal PVCs. PVCs-triggering VF have shorter CIs and preferentially arise from the lateral MB. Ablation is effective in management.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** ventricular fibrillation (MONDO:0000190), ventricular tachycardia (MONDO:0005477)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** VF (MESH:D014693), right bundle branch block (MESH:D002037), ventricular tachycardia (MESH:D017180), cardiomyopathy (MESH:D009202), PVC (MESH:D018879), idiopathic nonischemic cardiomyopathy (MESH:D002311), RV dysfunction (MESH:D018497), RV endocavitary arrhythmias (MESH:D001145)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12284679/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12284679