Marta De Riva Silva
Leiden University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marta De Riva Silva.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2015
Miki Yokokawa; Hyungjin Myra Kim; Kazim Baser; William G. Stevenson; Koichi Nagashima; Paolo Della Bella; Pasquale Vergara; Gerhard Hindricks; Arash Arya; Katja Zeppenfeld; Marta De Riva Silva; Emile G. Daoud; Sunil Kumar; Karl-Heinz Kuck; Ronald Tilz; Shibu Mathew; Hamid Ghanbari; Rakesh Latchamsetty; Fred Morady; Frank Bogun
BACKGROUND A recent meta-analysis demonstrated a survival benefit in post-infarction patients whose ventricular tachycardia (VT) was rendered noninducible by catheter ablation. Furthermore, patients with noninducible VT had a lower VT recurrence rate than did patients whose VT remained inducible after ablation. OBJECTIVES The purpose of this multicenter cohort study was to assess whether noninducibility after VT ablation is independently associated with improved survival. METHODS Data from 1,064 patients who underwent VT ablation for post-infarction VT at seven international centers were analyzed. The ablation procedure was considered successful if no VT was inducible at the end of the procedure and unsuccessful if VT remained inducible or if programmed stimulation was not performed at the end of the ablation. RESULTS Median follow-up time was 633 days. Noninducibility was independently associated with lower mortality (adjusted hazard ratio: 0.65; 95% confidence interval: 0.53 to 0.79; p<0.001). Atrial fibrillation, diabetes, and age were other independent predictors of higher mortality. Ablation of only the clinical VT in patients who also had inducible, nonclinical VTs was not associated with improved survival. CONCLUSIONS Noninducibility after VT ablation in patients with post-infarction VT is independently associated with lower mortality during long-term follow-up.
Heart Rhythm | 2014
Sebastiaan R.D. Piers; Marta De Riva Silva; Gijsbert F.L. Kapel; Serge A. Trines; Martin J. Schalij; Katja Zeppenfeld
BACKGROUND Specific 12-lead ECG criteria have been reported to predict an epicardial site of origin (SoO) of induced ventricular tachycardias (VTs) in left ventricular nonischemic cardiomyopathy. OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to (1) determine the value of ECG criteria to predict an epicardial SoO of clinically documented VTs, (2) analyze the effect of VT cycle length (CL) and antiarrhythmic drugs on the accuracy of ECG criteria, and (3) assess interobserver variability. METHODS In 36 consecutive patients with nonischemic left ventricular cardiomyopathy (age 58 ± 16 years, 75% male) who underwent combined endocardial/epicardial VT ablation, all clinically documented and induced right bundle branch block VTs were analyzed for previously reported ECG criteria to determine the SoO, as defined by ≥11/12 pace-map, concealed entrainment, and/or VT termination during ablation. RESULTS In 21 patients with clinically documented (25 mm/s) right bundle branch block VT, none of the ECG criteria differentiated between patients with and those without an epicardial SoO. In induced VTs (100 mm/s), 2 of 4 interval criteria differentiated between an endocardial and epicardial SoO for slow VTs (CL >350 ms) and 2 of 4 criteria in patients on amiodarone, but none for fast VTs (CL ≤350 ms) or patients off amiodarone. The Q wave in lead I was the most accurate criterion for an epicardial SoO (sensitivity 88%, specificity 80%). In both clinically documented and induced VTs, interobserver agreement was poor for pseudodelta wave and moderate for other criteria. CONCLUSION When applied to clinically documented VTs, no ECG criterion could differentiate between patients with and those without an epicardial SoO. Published interval-based ECG criteria do not apply to fast VTs and patients off amiodarone.
Circulation-arrhythmia and Electrophysiology | 2016
Konstantinos C. Siontis; Hyungjin Myra Kim; William G. Stevenson; Akira Fujii; Paolo Della Bella; Pasquale Vergara; Kalyanam Shivkumar; Roderick Tung; Duc H. Do; Emile G. Daoud; Toshimasa Okabe; Katja Zeppenfeld; Marta De Riva Silva; Gerhard Hindricks; Arash Arya; Alexander E. Weber; Karl-Heinz Kuck; Andreas Metzner; Shibu Mathew; Johannes Riedl; Miki Yokokawa; Krit Jongnarangsin; Rakesh Latchamsetty; Fred Morady; Frank Bogun
Background—Recurrence of ventricular tachycardia (VT) after ablation in patients with previous myocardial infarction is associated with adverse prognosis. However, the impact of the timing of VT recurrence on outcomes is unclear. Methods and Results—We analyzed data from a multicenter collaborative database of patients who underwent catheter ablation for infarct-related VT. Multivariable Cox regression analyses investigated the effect of the timing of VT recurrence on the composite outcome of death or heart transplantation using VT recurrence as a time-varying covariate. A total of 1412 patients were included (92% men; age: 66.7±10.7 years), and 605 patients (42.8%) had a recurrence after median 116 days (188 [31.1%] within 1 month, 239 [39.5%] between 1 and 12 months, and 178 [29.4%] after 12 months). At median follow-up of 670 days, 375 patients (26.6%) experienced death or heart transplantation. The median time from recurrence to death or heart transplantation was 65 and 198.5 days in patients with recurrence ⩽30 days and >30 days post ablation, respectively. The adjusted hazard ratio (95% confidence interval) for the effect of VT recurrence occurring immediately post ablation on death or heart transplantation was 3.45 (2.33–5.11) in reference to no recurrence. However, the magnitude of this effect decreased statistically significantly (P<0.001) as recurrence occurred later in the follow-up period. The respective risk estimates for VT recurrence at 30 days, 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years were 3.36 (2.29–4.93), 2.94 (2.09–4.14), 2.50 (1.85–3.37), and 1.81 (1.37–2.40). Conclusions—VT recurrence post ablation is associated with a mortality risk that is highest soon after the ablation and decreases gradually thereafter.
Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2014
Sebastiaan R.D. Piers; Qian Tao; Marta De Riva Silva; Hans-Marc J. Siebelink; Martin J. Schalij; Rob J. van der Geest; Katja Zeppenfeld
JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology | 2018
Charlotte Brouwer; Gijsbert F.L. Kapel; Monique R.M. Jongbloed; Martin J. Schalij; Marta De Riva Silva; Katja Zeppenfeld
Europace | 2016
Y. Naruse; Marta De Riva Silva; Masaya Watanabe; Jeroen Venlet; Katja Zeppenfeld
Europace | 2016
A.F.A. Androulakis; Marijke Vester; Jeroen Venlet; Marta De Riva Silva; Martin J. Schalij; Mand Khidir; Harriette F. Verwey; Laurens F. Tops; Saskia L.M.A. Beeres; Katja Zeppenfeld
Europace | 2016
Charlotte Brouwer; Gijsbert F.L. Kapel; Y. Naruse; Marta De Riva Silva; Martin J. Schalij; Katja Zeppenfeld
Europace | 2016
Y. Naruse; Marta De Riva Silva; Masaya Watanabe; Jeroen Venlet; Katja Zeppenfeld
Europace | 2016
Jeroen Venlet; Qian Tao; Sebastiaan R.D. Piers; Michiel A. de Graaf; Gijsbert F.L. Kapel; Marta De Riva Silva; Lucia J. Kroft; Rob J. van der Geest; Katja Zeppenfeld