1. Atrial Fibrillation Ablation Using a Closed Irrigation Radiofrequency Ablation Catheter
- Author
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Michael A. Morse, Keith Golden, John Paul Mounsey, Eugene Chung, Ankit Patel, Anil K. Gehi, and Pahresah Roomiani
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hazard ratio ,Catheter ablation ,Atrial fibrillation ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Ablation ,Surgery ,Catheter ,Internal medicine ,Cohort ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Survival analysis - Abstract
Background:Catheter ablation is an effective therapy for symptomatic, medically refractory atrial fibrillation (AF). Open-irrigated radiofrequency (RF) ablation catheters produce transmural lesions at the cost of increased fluid delivery. In vivo models suggest closed-irrigated RF catheters create equivalent lesions, but clinical outcomes are limited. Methods:A cohort of 195 sequential patients with symptomatic AF underwent stepwise AF ablation (AFA) using a closed-irrigation ablation catheter. Recurrence of AF was monitored and outcomes were evaluated using Kaplan–Meier survival analysis and Cox proportional hazards models. Results:Mean age was 59.0 years, 74.9% were male, 56.4% of patients were paroxysmal and mean duration of AF was 5.4 years. Patients had multiple comorbidities including hypertension (76.4%), tobacco abuse (42.1%), diabetes (17.4%), and obesity (mean body mass index 30.8). The median follow-up was 55.8 weeks. Overall event-free survival was 73.6% with one ablation and 77.4% after reablation (reablation rate was 8.7%). Median time to recurrence was 26.9 weeks. AF was more likely to recur in patients being treated with antiarrhythmic therapy at the time of last follow-up (recurrence rate 30.3% with antiarrhythmic drugs, 13.2% without antiarrhythmic drugs; hazard ratio [HR] 2.2, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.1–4.4, P = 0.024) and in those with a history of AF greater than 2 years duration (HR 2.7, 95% CI 1.1–6.9, P = 0.038). Conclusions:Our study represents the largest cohort of patients receiving AFA with closed-irrigation ablation catheters. We demonstrate comparable outcomes to those previously reported in studies of open-irrigation ablation catheters. Given the theoretical benefits of a closed-irrigation system, a large head-to-head comparison using this catheter is warranted. (PACE 2012; 35:506–513)
- Published
- 2012