Language
English
Publication Date
4-15-2025
Journal
Circulation
DOI
10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.124.071352
PMID
39989365
PMCID
PMC12375378
PubMedCentral® Posted Date
2-24-2026
PubMedCentral® Full Text Version
Author MSS
Abstract
Background: Catheter ablation of ventricular arrhythmias, one of the most rapidly growing procedures in cardiac electrophysiology, is associated with magnetic resonance imaging-detected brain lesions in more than half of cases. Although a retrograde aortic approach is conventional, modern tools enable entry through a transseptal approach that may avoid embolization of debris from the arterial system. We sought to test the hypothesis that a transseptal puncture would mitigate brain injury compared with a retrograde aortic approach.
Methods: The TRAVERSE trial (Transseptal Versus Retrograde Aortic Ventricular Entry to Reduce Systemic Emboli) was a multicenter randomized controlled comparative effectiveness trial. Patients with left ventricular arrhythmias undergoing catheter ablation procedures were randomly assigned to a transseptal puncture approach compared (1:1) with a retrograde aortic approach. The primary outcome was the presence of an acute brain lesion detected by magnetic resonance imaging. Secondary outcomes included clinically manifest complications, procedural efficacy, and 6-month neurocognitive assessments.
Results: Among the 62 patients randomly assigned to a retrograde aortic approach with postoperative brain magnetic resonance imaging, 28 (45%) exhibited an acute brain lesion compared with 19 of the 69 (28%) of those randomized to a transseptal puncture (P=0.036). No differences in clinically manifest complications or procedural efficacy were observed. More patients in the retrograde aortic arm were categorized as having a high likelihood of cognitive impairment at 6 months (33% compared with 19% of those in the transseptal arm), but substantial loss to follow-up was present.
Conclusions: Among patients undergoing left ventricular catheter ablation procedures, a transseptal approach reduced the risk of acute brain lesions by nearly half compared with a retrograde aortic approach without sacrificing safety or efficacy. Given a likely embolic pathogenesis, the brain magnetic resonance imaging findings may reflect a propensity to other organ damage; these findings may extend to other procedures requiring left ventricular entry.
Keywords
Humans, Catheter Ablation, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Heart Ventricles, Treatment Outcome
Published Open-Access
yes
Recommended Citation
Marcus, Gregory M; Tung, Roderick; Gerstenfeld, Edward P; et al., "Left Ventricular Entry to Reduce Brain Lesions During Catheter Ablation: A Randomized Trial" (2025). Faculty, Staff and Students Publications. 6866.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/baylor_docs/6866
Comments
Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT03946072.