Acute and Long-Term Effects of Full-Power Electroporation Ablation Directly on the Porcine Esophagus

Publication date

2017-05

Authors

Neven, KGEJISNI 0000000387508941
van Es, RenéORCID 0000-0001-9950-4388
van Driel, Vincent J H M
van Wessel, Harry
Fidder, Herma HISNI 0000000394282135
Vink, A.ORCID 0000-0002-9371-8788ISNI 0000000390107997
Doevendans, PieterISNI 0000000110574516
Wittkampf, Fred H. M.ISNI 0000000035769777

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Esophageal ulceration and fistula are complications of pulmonary vein isolation using thermal energy sources. Irreversible electroporation is a novel, nonthermal ablation modality for pulmonary vein isolation. A single 200 J application can create deep myocardial lesions. Acute and chronic effects of this new energy source on the esophagus are unknown. METHODS AND RESULTS: In 8 pigs (±70 kg), the suprasternal esophagus was surgically exposed. A linear suction device with a single 35-mm long and 6-mm wide protruding linear electrode inside a plastic suction cup was used for ablation. Single, nonarcing, nonbarotraumatic, cathodal 100 and 200 J applications were delivered at 2 different sites on the anterior esophageal adventitia. No proton-pump inhibitors were administered during follow-up. Esophagoscopy was performed at days 2 and 7. After euthanasia at day 60, the esophagus was evaluated visually and histologically. All ablations were uneventful. Esophagoscopy at day 2 showed small white densities in the ablated areas, which appeared to be small intraepithelial vesicles. No epithelial erythema, erosions, or ulcerations were seen. At day 7, all densities had disappeared, and all esophaguses appeared completely normalized. After euthanasia, there were no macroscopically visible lesions on the adventitia or epithelium. Histologically, a small scar was observed at the outer part of the muscular layer, whereas the mucosa and submucosa were normal. CONCLUSIONS: Esophageal architecture remains unaffected 2 months after irreversible electroporation, purposely targeting the adventitia. Irreversible electroporation seems to be a safe modality for catheter ablation near the esophagus.

Keywords

ablation, complication, esophagus, irreversible electroporation, tissue specificity, Taverne, Journal Article

Citation

Neven, K, van Es, R, van Driel, V, van Wessel, H, Fidder, H, Vink, A, Doevendans, P & Wittkampf, F 2017, 'Acute and Long-Term Effects of Full-Power Electroporation Ablation Directly on the Porcine Esophagus', Circulation. Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology, vol. 10, no. 5, e004672. https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCEP.116.004672