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Acute and early outcomes of focal impulse and rotor modulation (FIRM)-guided rotors-only ablation in patients with nonparoxysmal atrial fibrillation

Authors :
J. David Burkhardt
Patrick Müller
Sanghamitra Mohanty
Phillipp Halbfaß
Carola Gianni
Rodney Horton
Gery Tomassoni
Chintan Trivedi
Anja Schade
Amin Al-Ahmad
Andrea Natale
Thomas Deneke
G. Joseph Gallinghouse
Rong Bai
Patrick Hranitzky
Yalçın Gökoğlan
Javier Sanchez
Mahmut F. Güneş
Tamara Metz
Luigi Di Biase
Source :
Heart Rhythm. 13:830-835
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

Background Focal impulse and rotor modulation (FIRM)-guided ablation targets sites that are thought to sustain atrial fibrillation (AF). Objective The purpose of this study was to evaluate the acute and mid-term outcomes of FIRM-guided only ablation in patients with nonparoxysmal AF. Methods We prospectively enrolled patients with persistent and long-standing persistent (LSP) AF at three centers to undergo FIRM-guided only ablation. We evaluated acute procedural success (defined as AF termination, organization, or ≥10% slowing), safety (incidence of periprocedural complications), and long-term success (single-procedure freedom from atrial tachycardia [AT]/AF off antiarrhythmic drugs [AAD] after a 2-month blanking period). Results Twenty-nine patients with persistent (N = 20) and LSP (N = 9) AF underwent FIRM mapping. Rotors were presents in all patients, with a mean of 4 ± 1.2 per patient (62% were left atrial); 1 focal impulse was identified. All sources were successfully ablated, and overall acute success rate was 41% (0 AF termination, 2 AF slowing, 10 AF organization). There were no major procedure-related adverse events. After a mean 5.7 months of follow-up, single-procedure freedom from AT/AF without AADs was 17%. Conclusion In nonparoxysmal AF patients, targeted ablation of FIRM-identified rotors is not effective in obtaining AF termination, organization, or slowing during the procedure. After mid-term follow-up, the strategy of ablating FIRM-identified rotors alone did not prevent recurrence from AT/AF.

Details

ISSN :
15475271
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Heart Rhythm
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8a71d1d262340116b1d787bc354e8a18