z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Arrhythmia Termination During Radiofrequency Delivery Improves Outcomes after Catheter Ablation for Persistent and Long Standing Persistent Atrial Fibrillation
Author(s) -
Alexandriăstasă,
Corneliu Iorgulescu,
Стефан Богдан,
Silvia Deaconu,
Stefan Petre,
Viviana Gondoș,
Maria Dorobanțu,
Radu Vătășescu
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
romanian journal of cardiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2734-6382
pISSN - 1220-658X
DOI - 10.47803/rjc.2021.31.2.335
Subject(s) - medicine , atrial fibrillation , cardiology , pulmonary vein , ablation , atrial flutter , atrial tachycardia , catheter ablation , sinus rhythm , radiofrequency ablation , catheter , anesthesia , surgery
Background: Achieving long-term successful outcomes with catheter ablation (CA) of persistent atrial fi brillation (PsAF) remains a challenge. Multiple attempts to determine effective ablation strategies besides the pulmonary veins (PV) were made but, so far, there is no agreed standard approach and no clear consensus as to which is the best one. Among the most frequently used techniques was ablation of complex atrial fractionated electrograms (CFAE) but studies showed contradictory results. The optimal procedural endpoint also needs further refi nement. Objectives: We sought to evaluate outcomes in regard to patient characteristics and procedural termination. We also aimed to assess whether continuation of antiarrythmic therapy in the blanking period (1 to 3 months after the procedure) influences long term results. Methods: We enrolled consecutive patients with persistent and long-standing PsAF (LS-PsAF) who underwent one or more radiofrequency catheter ablations (RF CA) - pulmonary vein antral isolation (PVAI), followed by CFAE or resultant atrial tachycardia/flutter elimination, were retrospectively analyzed. Procedural objective was tachyarrhythmia (AF or resultant atrial flutters/tachycardias) termination (TT) to sinus rhythm (SR) during RF delivery. If after extensive substrate based or activation guided ablation sinus rhyhtm was not restored, conversion was performed with antiarrhythmic drugs (AAD), overdrive pacing or electrical shock. Screening for arrhythmia recurrence was performed via clinical interview and 48 hours Holter monitoring at 1,3 and 6 months and then every 6 months. Results: The cohort included 94 patients (age 54.5±11.4, 67 (71%) males, CHADSVASc 2.3±2, 11 (12%) LS-PsAF) Acute restoration of sinus rhythm (SR) was achieved in 93.4% of the cases, 43% by ablation of CFAE or resultant atrial tachycardia/fl utter(AT/AFL), 36.2% by electric cardioversion, 7.4% by chemical conversion, 3.1 % overdrive pacing, 3.7 % spontaneuous / mechanical. The long term success rate after a mean of 1.7±0.8 procedures was 59% at a mean follow-up period of 80±28 months. Freedom from AF was significantly higher when arrhythmia termination was obtained during RF delivery (p – 0.003). Short-term use of AAD in the blanking period did not lead to improved long term outcomes. Conclusions: In patients with PsAF and LS-PsAF restoration of sinus rhyhtm during RF delivery for pulmonary vein isolation, ablation of CFAE or resultant atrial tachyarrhythmia predicts long term procedural success. Further research to determine the best strategy to achieve this outcome is necessary.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here