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Long-term outcomes of stand-alone Maze IV for persistent/long-standing persistent atrial fibrillation

Authors :
Simone Gulletta
Elisabetta Lapenna
Paolo Della Bella
Michele De Bonis
Ottavio Alfieri
Stefania Ruggeri
Manuela Cireddu
Stefano Benussi
Ilaria Giambuzzi
Alessandro Castiglioni
Benedetto Del Forno
Lapenna, Elisabetta
De Bonis, Michele
Giambuzzi, Ilaria
Del Forno, Benedetto
Ruggeri, Stefania
Cireddu, Manuela
Gulletta, Simone
Castiglioni, Alessandro
Alfieri, Ottavio
Della Bella, Paolo
Benussi, Stefano
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The study sought to assess the long-term outcomes of the stand-alone Cox-Maze IV procedure in symptomatic patients with refractory, persistent, or long-standing persistent atrial fibrillation (AF).Fifty-nine consecutive patients (mean age 52 ± 10.5 years, previous catheter ablation 80%, left ventricular ejection fraction 55% ± 3.4%, median left atrial volume index 41 [interquartile range, 34-47] mL/mNo hospital deaths occurred and 1 (1.7%) patient required postoperative pacemaker implantation. Follow-up was 97% complete (median 5.8 [interquartile range, 3.92-7.11] years). The overall survival at 7 years was 97% ± 2.3%. The 7-year cumulative incidence function of AF recurrence and of AF recurrence off class I or III antiarrhythmic drugs (AADs), with death as competing risk, was 14.2% ± 5.6% (95% confidence interval [CI], 5.5%-26.8%) and 26.5% ± 6.9% (95% CI, 14.2%-40.4%), respectively. Multivariate analysis identified the duration of AF as the only predictor of AF recurrence (hazard ratio, 1.01; 95% CI, 1.01-1.02; P.001). At 7 years, the proportion of patients in sinus rhythm was 84%, of whom 74% were off class I or III AADs. At the last follow-up, 75% of patients were in European Heart Rhythm Association functional class I, no stroke and thromboembolic events were documented, and 70% of patients were off anticoagulation therapy. Left ventricular ejection fraction improved from 53% ± 3.4% at baseline to 59% ± 3.4% at follow-up (P = .003).This study confirmed the safety and efficacy in the long term (7 years) of the stand-alone Cox-Maze IV surgical procedure for persistent or long-standing persistent AF. Indeed, more than 70% of the patients were in sinus rhythm off class I or III AADs and off oral anticoagulation.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2e7faa796d44ea900f8fea43366a2447