@article{57f1bf2c35d34c789da71260648a981b,
title = "Spatial Accuracy of a Clinically Established Noninvasive Electrocardiographic Imaging System for the Detection of Focal Activation in an Intact Porcine Model",
abstract = "Background: Noninvasive electrocardiographic imaging (ECGi) is used clinically to map arrhythmias before ablation. Despite its clinical use, validation data regarding the accuracy of the system for the identification of arrhythmia foci is limited. Methods: Nine pigs underwent closed-chest placement of endocardial fiducial markers, computed tomography, and pacing in all cardiac chambers with ECGi acquisition. Pacing location was reconstructed from biplane fluoroscopy and registered to the computed tomography using the fiducials. A blinded investigator predicted the pacing location from the ECGi data, and the distance to the true pacing catheter tip location was calculated. Results: A total of 109 endocardial and 9 epicardial locations were paced in 9 pigs. ECGi predicted the correct chamber of origin in 85% of atrial and 92% of ventricular sites. Lateral locations were predicted in the correct chamber more often than septal locations (97% versus 79%, P=0.01). Absolute distances in space between the true and predicted pacing locations were 20.7 (13.8-25.6) mm (median and [first-third] quartile). Distances were not significantly different across cardiac chambers. Conclusions: The ECGi system is able to correctly identify the chamber of origin for focal activation in the vast majority of cases. Determination of the true site of origin is possible with sufficient accuracy with consideration of these error estimates.",
keywords = "echocardiography, electrocardiography, electrophysiology, fluoroscopy, tomography",
author = "Stephan Hohmann and Rettmann, {Maryam E.} and Hiroki Konishi and Anna Borenstein and Songyun Wang and Atsushi Suzuki and Michalak, {Gregory J.} and Monahan, {Kristi H.} and Parker, {Kay D.} and Newman, {L. Katie} and Packer, {Douglas L.}",
note = "Funding Information: This study was funded by Medtronic Inc. Dr Hohmann is funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation)—project number 380200397. Dr Packer{\textquoteright}s work is funded in part by a clinician investigator award from the Mayo Foundation. His work is also supported by the Goldsmith Foundation as well as the Sanford Diller Foundation. Funding Information: Dr Packer receives research funding from Abbott, Biosense Webster, Boston Scientific/EPT, CardioInsight, CardioFocus, Endosense, Hansen Medical, Medtronic, National Institutes of Health, Robertson Foundation, St Jude Medical, Siemens and Thermedical. He has provided consulting services for Abbott, Aperture Diagnostics, Biosense Webster, Inc., Biotronik, Boston Scientific, CardioFocus, Johnson & Johnson, MediaSphere Medical, Medtronic, St Jude Medical, Siemens, SigNum Preemptive Healthcare, Spectrum Dynamics, and Thermedical, receiving no personal compensation for these consulting activities. Mayo Clinic and Dr Packer have intellectual property in mapping technology which has been licensed to St Jude Medical, and Mayo Clinic and Dr Packer have received annual royalties. Dr Packer and Mayo Clinic jointly have equity in a privately held company, External Beam Ablation Medical Devices. A. Borenstein is an employee of Medtronic, Inc. The other authors report no conflicts. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2019 Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. All rights reserved.",
year = "2019",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1161/CIRCEP.119.007570",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "12",
journal = "Circulation: Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology",
issn = "1941-3149",
publisher = "Lippincott Williams and Wilkins",
number = "11",
}