Marc Dubuc
Montreal Heart Institute
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Featured researches published by Marc Dubuc.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2008
Denis Roy; Mario Talajic; Stanley Nattel; D. George Wyse; Paul Dorian; Kerry L. Lee; Martial G. Bourassa; J. Malcolm; O. Arnold; Alfred E. Buxton; A. John Camm; Stuart J. Connolly; Marc Dubuc; Anique Ducharme; Peter G. Guerra; Stefan H. Hohnloser; Jean Lambert; Jean-Yves Le Heuzey; Ole Dyg Pedersen; Jean-Lucien Rouleau; Bramah N. Singh; Lynne W. Stevenson; William G. Stevenson; Bernard Thibault; Albert L. Waldo
BACKGROUND It is common practice to restore and maintain sinus rhythm in patients with atrial fibrillation and heart failure. This approach is based in part on data indicating that atrial fibrillation is a predictor of death in patients with heart failure and suggesting that the suppression of atrial fibrillation may favorably affect the outcome. However, the benefits and risks of this approach have not been adequately studied. METHODS We conducted a multicenter, randomized trial comparing the maintenance of sinus rhythm (rhythm control) with control of the ventricular rate (rate control) in patients with a left ventricular ejection fraction of 35% or less, symptoms of congestive heart failure, and a history of atrial fibrillation. The primary outcome was the time to death from cardiovascular causes. RESULTS A total of 1376 patients were enrolled (682 in the rhythm-control group and 694 in the rate-control group) and were followed for a mean of 37 months. Of these patients, 182 (27%) in the rhythm-control group died from cardiovascular causes, as compared with 175 (25%) in the rate-control group (hazard ratio in the rhythm-control group, 1.06; 95% confidence interval, 0.86 to 1.30; P=0.59 by the log-rank test). Secondary outcomes were similar in the two groups, including death from any cause (32% in the rhythm-control group and 33% in the rate-control group), stroke (3% and 4%, respectively), worsening heart failure (28% and 31%), and the composite of death from cardiovascular causes, stroke, or worsening heart failure (43% and 46%). There were also no significant differences favoring either strategy in any predefined subgroup. CONCLUSIONS In patients with atrial fibrillation and congestive heart failure, a routine strategy of rhythm control does not reduce the rate of death from cardiovascular causes, as compared with a rate-control strategy. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00597077.)
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2000
Denis Roy; Mario Talajic; Paul Dorian; Stuart J. Connolly; Mark J. Eisenberg; Martin S. Green; Teresa Kus; Jean Lambert; Marc Dubuc; Pierre Gagné; Stanley Nattel; Bernard Thibault
Background The restoration and maintenance of sinus rhythm is a desirable goal in patients with atrial fibrillation, because the prevention of recurrences can improve cardiac function and relieve symptoms. Uncontrolled studies have suggested that amiodarone in low doses may be more effective and safer than other agents in preventing recurrence, but this agent has not been tested in a large, randomized trial. Methods We undertook a prospective, multicenter trial to test the hypothesis that low doses of amiodarone would be more efficacious in preventing recurrent atrial fibrillation than therapy with sotalol or propafenone. We randomly assigned patients who had had at least one episode of atrial fibrillation within the previous six months to amiodarone or to sotalol or propafenone, given in an open-label fashion. The patients in the group assigned to sotalol or propafenone underwent a second randomization to determine whether they would receive sotalol or propafenone first; if the first drug was unsuccessfu...
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013
Douglas L. Packer; Robert C. Kowal; Kevin Wheelan; James M. Irwin; Jean Champagne; Peter G. Guerra; Marc Dubuc; Vivek Y. Reddy; Linda Nelson; Richard Holcomb; John W. Lehmann; Jeremy N. Ruskin
OBJECTIVES This study sought to assess the safety and effectiveness of a novel cryoballoon ablation technology designed to achieve single-delivery pulmonary vein (PV) isolation. BACKGROUND Standard radiofrequency ablation is effective in eliminating atrial fibrillation (AF) but requires multiple lesion delivery at the risk of significant complications. METHODS Patients with documented symptomatic paroxysmal AF and previously failed therapy with ≥ 1 membrane active antiarrhythmic drug underwent 2:1 randomization to either cryoballoon ablation (n = 163) or drug therapy (n = 82). A 90-day blanking period allowed for optimization of antiarrhythmic drug therapy and reablation if necessary. Effectiveness of the cryoablation procedure versus drug therapy was determined at 12 months. RESULTS Patients had highly symptomatic AF (78% paroxysmal, 22% early persistent) and experienced failure of at least one antiarrhythmic drug. Cryoablation produced acute isolation of three or more PVs in 98.2% and all four PVs in 97.6% of patients. PVs isolation was achieved with the balloon catheter alone in 83%. At 12 months, treatment success was 69.9% (114 of 163) of cryoblation patients compared with 7.3% of antiarrhythmic drug patients (absolute difference, 62.6% [p < 0.001]). Sixty-five (79%) drug-treated patients crossed over to cryoablation during 12 months of study follow-up due to recurrent, symptomatic AF, constituting drug treatment failure. There were 7 of the resulting 228 cryoablated patients (3.1%) with a >75% reduction in PV area during 12 months of follow-up. Twenty-nine of 259 procedures (11.2%) were associated with phrenic nerve palsy as determined by radiographic screening; 25 of these had resolved by 12 months. Cryoablation patients had significantly improved symptoms at 12 months. CONCLUSIONS The STOP AF trial demonstrated that cryoballoon ablation is a safe and effective alternative to antiarrhythmic medication for the treatment of patients with symptomatic paroxysmal AF, for whom at least one antiarrhythmic drug has failed, with risks within accepted standards for ablation therapy. (A Clinical Study of the Arctic Front Cryoablation Balloon for the Treatment of Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation [Stop AF]; NCT00523978).
Circulation | 2003
Paul Khairy; Patrick Chauvet; John W. Lehmann; Jean Lambert; Laurent Macle; Jean-François Tanguay; Martin G. Sirois; Domenic Santoianni; Marc Dubuc
Background—Radiofrequency (RF) catheter ablation is limited by thromboembolic complications. The objective of this study was to compare the incidence and characteristics of thrombi complicating RF and cryoenergy ablation, a novel technology for the catheter-based treatment of arrhythmias. Methods and Results—Ablation lesions (n=197) were performed in 22 mongrel dogs at right atrial, right ventricular, and left ventricular sites preselected by a randomized factorial design devised to compare RF ablation with cryocatheter configurations of varying sizes (7F and 9F), cooling rates (−1°C/s, −5°C/s, and −20°C/s) and target temperatures (−55°C and −75°C). Animals were pretreated with acetylsalicylic acid and received intraprocedural intravenous unfractionated heparin. Seven days after ablation, the incidence of thrombus formation was significantly higher with RF than with cryoablation (75.8% versus 30.1%, P =0.0005). In a multiple regression model, RF energy remained an independent predictor of thrombus formation compared with cryoenergy (OR, 5.6; 95% CI, 1.7, 18.1;P =0.0042). Thrombus volume was also significantly greater with RF than with cryoablation (median, 2.8 versus 0.0 mm3;P <0.0001). More voluminous thrombi were associated with larger RF lesions, but cryolesion dimensions were not predictive of thrombus size. Conclusions—RF energy is significantly more thrombogenic than cryoenergy, with a higher incidence of thrombus formation and larger thrombus volumes. The extent of hyperthermic tissue injury is positively correlated with thrombus bulk, whereas cryoenergy lesion size does not predict thrombus volume, most likely reflecting intact tissue ultrastructure with endothelial cell preservation.
Heart Rhythm | 2011
Jason G. Andrade; Paul Khairy; Peter G. Guerra; Marc W. Deyell; Lena Rivard; Laurent Macle; Bernard Thibault; Mario Talajic; Denis Roy; Marc Dubuc
Further-more, the procedure is complex, time consuming, andhighly dependent on operator competency given the diffi-culties associated with creating contiguous curvilinear le-sions with focal ablation. As such, considerable effort hasbeen directed toward deriving more effective and saferapproaches.Balloon-based ablation systems potentially offer a sim-pler and faster means of achieving pulmonary vein isolation(PVI) that, theoretically, is less reliant on operator dexterity.Concurrently, cryothermal energy offers advantages overRF energy, including increased catheter stability, less endo-thelial disruption with lower thromboembolic risk, and min-imal tissue contraction with healing, an observation thoughtto result in less esophageal damage and PVS.
Circulation | 1991
W Kaltenbrunner; René Cardinal; Marc Dubuc; Mohammad Shenasa; Réginald Nadeau; Gérald Tremblay; Michel Vermeulen; Pierre Savard; Pierre Pagé
BackgroundLeft ventricular endocardial reentry is the conventional concept underlying surgery for ventricular tachycardia (VT). We assessed the incidences of patterns showing complete reentry circuits at either the subendocardial or subepicardial level and of patterns in which left ventricular endocardial mapping could only in part account for a reentrant mechanism. Methods and ResultsWe retrospectively analyzed epicardial and left ventricular endocardial isochronal maps of 47 VTs induced in 28 patients with chronic myocardial infarction (inferior, 14 patients; anteroseptal, 14 patients). Electrograms were recorded intraoperatively from 128 sites with epicardial sock and transatrial left ventricular endocardial balloon electrode arrays. Given the methodology used in this study, the mapping characteristics of the tachycardias suggested five types of activation patterns: 1) complete (90% or more ofVT cycle length) subendocardial reentry circuits in seven VTs (15%) and seven patients (25%), 2) complete subepicardial reentry circuits in fourVTs (9%o) and four patients (14%), 3) incompletely mapped circuits with a left ventricular endocardial breakthrough preceding the epicardial breakthrough in 25 VTs (53%) and 21 patients (75%), 4) incompletely mapped circuits with a left ventricular epicardial breakthrough preceding the endocardial breakthrough in three VTs (6%) and three patients (11%), and 5) a right ventricular epicardial breakthrough preceding the left ventricular endocardial breakthrough in eight VTs (17%) and seven patients (25%). After surgery, one type 3 VT and three type 5 VTs were reinducible. Thus, left ventricular endocardial reentry substrates (types 1 and 3) accounted for 68% of VTs, but substrates involving subepicardial (types 2 and 4) and deep septal layers (type 5) accounted for 32% of VTs. ConclusionsIn a substantial number of VTs, a substrate localization that is at variance with the conventional concept can be detected by simultaneous epicardial and endocardial mapping and may require modification of the surgical approach conventionally aimed at endocardial layers.
Journal of Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiology | 1998
Marc Dubuc; Mario Talajic; Denis Roy; Bernard Thibault; Tack Ki Leung; Peter L. Friedman
We investigated the feasibility of using cryogenic technology in an electrode catheter for percutaneous ablation of cardiac tissue. Despite its high success rate, radiofrequency catheter ablation has important limitations especially with regards to the treatment of ventricular arrhythmias associated with a chronic scar. Arrhythmia surgery experience has shown that freezing with a hand held probe can permanently ablate the arrhythmogenic substrate of ventricular tachycardia associated with an old scar. Moreover, cryosurgery also allows for reversible “ice mapping,” in which the area likely responsible for the arrhythmia can be evaluated by suppressing its electrophysiologic properties prior to the creation of an irreversible state. A new steerable cryoablation catheter using Halocarbon 502 as a refrigerant was utilized in six dogs. Serial cryoapplications were performed in the right and left ventricles. In two dogs, we attempted reversible ice mapping of the AV node. Pathological evaluation of the lesions was done acutely in all the animals. Forty-two cryoapplications were delivered at a mean temperature of −45 ± 9.8°C. No lesion was found at pathological evaluation for 16 cryoapplications which did not achieve a temperature of less (colder) than −30°C. The remaining applications resulted in 26 lesions which were hemorrhagic and sharply demarcated from normal myocardium. Histological evaluation revealed contraction band necrosis. Reversible ice mapping of the AV node was successfully achieved in two animals. Cryoablation is feasible using an electrode catheter with multiple electrodes. This technology has the potential to allow for reversible ice mapping to confirm a successful ablation target before definitive ablation.
Circulation | 2008
Kristina Lemola; Denis Chartier; Yung-Hsin Yeh; Marc Dubuc; Raymond Cartier; Andrew Armour; Michael Ting; Masao Sakabe; Akiko Shiroshita-Takeshita; Philippe Comtois; Stanley Nattel
Background— Pulmonary vein (PV) –encircling radiofrequency ablation frequently is effective in vagal atrial fibrillation (AF), and there is evidence that PVs may be particularly prone to cholinergically induced arrhythmia mechanisms. However, PV ablation procedures also can affect intracardiac autonomic ganglia. The present study examined the relative role of PVs versus peri-PV autonomic ganglia in an experimental vagal AF model. Methods and Results— Cholinergic AF was studied under carbachol infusion in coronary perfused canine left atrial PV preparations in vitro and with cervical vagal stimulation in vivo. Carbachol caused dose-dependent AF promotion in vitro, which was not affected by excision of all PVs. Sustained AF could be induced easily in all dogs during vagal nerve stimulation in vivo both before and after isolation of all PVs with encircling lesions created by a bipolar radiofrequency ablation clamp device. PV elimination had no effect on atrial effective refractory period or its responses to cholinergic stimulation. Autonomic ganglia were identified by bradycardic and/or tachycardic responses to high-frequency subthreshold local stimulation. Ablation of the autonomic ganglia overlying all PV ostia suppressed the effective refractory period–abbreviating and AF-promoting effects of cervical vagal stimulation, whereas ablation of only left- or right-sided PV ostial ganglia failed to suppress AF. Dominant-frequency analysis suggested that the success of ablation in suppressing vagal AF depended on the elimination of high-frequency driver regions. Conclusions— Intact PVs are not needed for maintenance of experimental cholinergic AF. Ablation of the autonomic ganglia at the base of the PVs suppresses vagal responses and may contribute to the effectiveness of PV-directed ablation procedures in vagal AF.
Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1999
Marc Dubuc; Denis Roy; Bernard Thibault; Anique Ducharme; Jean-Claude Tardif; C Villemaire; Tack Ki Leung; Mario Talajic
While radiofrequency catheter ablation is very effective, it does not allow for prediction of success prior to full delivery of the energy. We investigated the use of cryoablation using a new catheter on the AV node to determine (1) if a successful site might be identified prior to the ablation itself, and (2) the parameters of cryoablation of the AV node using a new cryocatheter. In eight dogs, the cryoablation catheter was advanced to the AV node to produce transient high degree AV block by lowering the temperature to a minimum of −40°C (ice mapping). Transient high degree AV node block was obtained in seven of eight animals at a mean temperature of −39.9 ± 11.6°C. No significant pathological modification was found in all animals but one and, in all cases, electrophysiological parameters of the A V node measured before, 20 minutes, 60 minutes, and up to 56 days after cryoapplication were not significantly different. In the 12 other dogs, after ice mapping, cryoablation of the A V node was attempted with a single freeze‐thaw cycle in 6 dogs (group 1) and a double freeze‐thaw cycle in the other 6 dogs (group II). Chronic complete AV block was obtained in only one animal in group I compared to all animals in group II. Ablation of the A V node is effective with a double freeze‐thaw cycle using a percutaneous catheter cryoablation system. Ice mapping of the area allows for identification of the targeted site.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2010
Mario Talajic; Paul Khairy; Sylvie Levesque; Stuart J. Connolly; Paul Dorian; Marc Dubuc; Peter G. Guerra; Stefan H. Hohnloser; Kerry L. Lee; Laurent Macle; Stanley Nattel; Ole Dyg Pedersen; Lynne Warner Stevenson; Bernard Thibault; Albert L. Waldo; D. George Wyse; Denis Roy
OBJECTIVES The goal of this study was to evaluate the relationship between the presence of sinus rhythm and outcomes in patients with a history of congestive heart failure (CHF) and atrial fibrillation (AF). BACKGROUND The value of sinus rhythm maintenance in patients with AF and heart failure (HF) is uncertain. METHODS A total of 1,376 patients with AF, ejection fraction < or =35%, and heart failure symptoms were randomized to a rhythm- or rate-control strategy. Detailed efficacy analyses were used to evaluate the independent effects of treatment strategy and the presence of sinus rhythm on cardiovascular outcomes. RESULTS Overall, 445 (32%) patients died and 402 (29%) experienced worsening HF. The rhythm-control strategy was not predictive of cardiovascular mortality (hazard ratio [HR]: 0.90, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.70 to 1.16; p = 0.41), all-cause death (HR: 0.86, 95% CI: 0.69 to 1.08; p = 0.19), or worsening HF (HR: 0.86, 95% CI: 0.68 to 1.10; p = 0.23). In analyses devised to isolate the effect of underlying rhythm, sinus rhythm was not associated with cardiovascular mortality [HR: 1.22, 95% CI: 0.80 to 1.87; p = 0.35), total mortality [HR: 1.11, 95% CI: 0.78 to 1.58; p = 0.57), or worsening HF [HR: 0.62, 95% CI: 0.37 to 1.02; p = 0.059). CONCLUSIONS A rhythm-control strategy or the presence of sinus rhythm are not associated with better outcomes in patients with AF and CHF.