1. Cryoablation of atrial fibrillation in "very severe" obese patients (BMI ≥ 40): Indications, feasibility, procedural safety and efficacy, and clinical outcome (the ICE-Obese Extreme).
- Author
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Urbanek L, Schmidt B, Bordignon S, Schaack D, Ebrahimi R, Tohoku S, Hirokami J, Efe TH, Plank K, Schulte-Hahn B, Nowak B, Chun JKR, and Chen S
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Treatment Outcome, Middle Aged, Aged, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Heart Rate, Severity of Illness Index, Action Potentials, Retrospective Studies, Recurrence, Atrial Fibrillation surgery, Atrial Fibrillation physiopathology, Atrial Fibrillation diagnosis, Cryosurgery adverse effects, Feasibility Studies, Body Mass Index, Obesity diagnosis, Obesity complications, Obesity physiopathology, Pulmonary Veins surgery, Pulmonary Veins physiopathology
- Abstract
Background: Management of atrial fibrillation (AF) in very severe obese patients is challenging. Cryoballoon ablation (CBA) represents an effective rhythm control strategy. However, data in this patient group were limited., Methods: Highly symptomatic AF patients with body mass index (BMI) ≥ 40 kg/m
2 who had failed antiarrhythmic drug therapy and electrocardioversion and failure to achieve targeted body-weight-reduction underwent CBA., Results: Data of 72 very severe obese AF patients (Group A) and 129 AF patients with normal BMI (Group B, BMI < 25 kg/m2 ) were consecutively collected. Group A had significantly younger age (60.6 ± 10.4 vs. 69.2 ± 11.2 years), higher BMI (44.3 ± 4.3 vs. 22.5 ± 1.6 kg/m2 ). Procedural pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) was successful in all patients (2 touch-up ablation in Group A). Compared to Group B, Group A had similar procedural (61.3 ± 22.6 vs. 57.5 ± 19 min), similar fluoroscopy time (10.1 ± 5.5 vs. 9.2 ± 4.8 min) but significantly higher radiation dose (2852 ± 2095 vs. 884 ± 732 µGym2 ). We observed similar rates of real-time-isolation (78.6% vs. 78.5%), single-shot-isolation (86.5% vs. 88.8%), but significantly longer time-to-sustained-isolation (53.5 ± 33 vs. 43.2 ± 25 s). There was significantly higher rate of puncture-site-complication (6.9% vs. 1.6%) in Group A. One-year clinical success in paroxysmal AF was (Group A: 69.4% vs. Group B: 80.2%; p < .001), in persistent AF was (Group A: 58.1% vs. Group B: 62.8%; p = .889). In Re-Do procedures Group A had a numerically lower PVI durability (75.0% vs. 83.6%, p = .089)., Conclusion: For very severe obese AF patients, CBA appears feasible, leads to relatively good clinical outcome., (© 2024 The Authors. Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)- Published
- 2024
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