New method to improve treatment of atrial fibrillation

Summary of the technology

Researchers from the CNIC and HCSC have developed a system to guide ablation procedures in a patient-specific way in complex cases of persistent atrial fibrillation, identifying these key regions to be treated with great precision and specificity. Furthermore, it does not require additional equipment or consumables, but only software that could be implemented within any conventional electroanatomical browser, so it would not make current pulmonary vein isolation procedures more expensive, with the advantage of being able to perform patient-specific ablation in complex cases.

Spanish National Center for Cardiovascular Research (CNIC)

Details of the Technology Offer

Atrial fibrillation (AF), one of the most frequent types of arrhythmias, affects more than 30 million people worldwide and, in Spain, it is estimated that there are more than 600,000. In addition, it is also estimated that around 37% of the world's population over the age of 40 will suffer from it in their lifetime. Ablation (isolation of the pulmonary veins of the left atrium) with a catheter, aimed at isolating the pulmonary veins of the left atrium, is the conventional therapy for this disease when it does not respond to drug therapy. However, ablation offers suboptimal results in complex cases of AF because other regions of the atria, beyond the pulmonary veins, are also relevant to the maintenance of the arrhythmia. This is especially true in cases of persistent AF with months or years of evolution.

Researchers from the CNIC and HCSC have developed a system to guide ablation procedures in a patient-specific way in complex cases of persistent atrial fibrillation, identifying these key regions to be treated with great precision and specificity. Furthermore, it does not require additional equipment or consumables, but only software that could be implemented within any conventional electroanatomical browser, so it would not make current pulmonary vein isolation procedures more expensive, with the advantage of being able to perform patient-specific ablation in complex cases.

The intellectual property developed in CNIC (related to this project) to efficiently identify and target atrial fibrillation drivers during persistent atrial fibrillation is under further clinical assessment in the ongoing TAILOR-AF study (NCT05169320) conducted at the Hospital Clínico San Carlos (co-owner of the intellectual property). The main objective of this study is to identify (via iAM/iFM maps), target and ablate atrial fibrillation leading drivers in patients with symptomatic persistent atrial fibrillation recurrences despite ≥2 previous pulmonary vein isolation procedures. The methods include a percutaneous catheter mapping and ablation approach followed by a minimally invasive surgical approach via thoracoscopy, if necessary. As a secondary objective we will study the association of underlying blood biomarkers, atrial imaging and surface ECG parameters, with advanced remodeling stages requiring a surgical approach to target leading driver regions. This study illustrates the strong motivation of the laboratory to achieve clinical impact with the research activities performed in animal models.

Scientific publication

https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.119.314930

Intellectual property status

  • Granted Patent
  • Patent application number :EP3863510B1
  • Patent already applied for
  • Patent application number :US17/284,195

Related Keywords

  • Medical Technology / Biomedical Engineering
  • Medical Health related
  • Therapeutic
  • Other therapeutic (including defibrillators)
  • ablation
  • atrial fibrillation
  • arrythmia

About Spanish National Center for Cardiovascular Research (CNIC)

The Spanish National Center for Cardiovascular Research (CNIC) is a leading international research center dedicated to understanding the basis of cardiovascular health and disease and to translating this knowledge into improved patient care.

CNIC scientific area is organized into two departments focused on Basic Research and Clinical Research, fully interconnected through six multidisciplinary programs grouped into three research areas:

1 Vascular Pathophysiology
2 Myocardial Pathophysiology
3 Cell Developmental Biology

Our portfolio include biomarkers, genetic and diagnostic tools, animal models and treatments for cardiovascular, inflammatory and infectious diseases, among others. Some examples of our current projects include treatment for pulmonary hypertension, myeloproliferative diseases and trained immunity for prevention of infections. Regarding diagnosis, we are currently working on biomarkers for myocarditis, subclinical atherosclerosis and calcific aortic valve disease.

CNIC (TTO)

Never miss an update from CNIC (TTO)

Create your free account to connect with CNIC (TTO) and thousands of other innovative organizations and professionals worldwide

CNIC

Send a request for information
to CNIC

About Technology Offers

Technology Offers on Innoget are directly posted
and managed by its members as well as evaluation of requests for information. Innoget is the trusted open innovation and science network aimed at directly connect industry needs with professionals online.

Help

Need help requesting additional information or have questions regarding this Technology Offer?
Contact Innoget support