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Maintenance of sinus rhythm after electrical cardioversion to identify patients with persistent atrial fibrillation who respond favorably to pulmonary vein isolation: the pre-pacific study

Authors :
Luca Rosario Limite
Guillaume Laborie
F. Daniel Ramirez
Jean-Paul Albenque
Stephane Combes
Philippe Lagrange
Ziad Khoueiry
Agustín Bortone
Source :
Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine, Vol 11 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2024.

Abstract

BackgroundPulmonary vein isolation (PVI) is successful in approximately 50% of patients with persistent atrial fibrillation (PsAF) at one year. Identifying pre-procedurally the patients who respond favorably to a PVI alone strategy could improve their management. The present study aims to assess the predictive value of clinical response to pre-ablation electrical cardioversion (ECV) to identify the responders to PVI.MethodsConsecutive patients undergoing catheter ablation for PsAF were retrospectively classified, as “ECV successful” vs. “ECV failure”, according to the rhythm of presentation after an ECV performed ≥4 weeks. Clinical and procedural data were analyzed in both groups according to the ablation strategy applied (PVI vs. PVI + substrate modification).ResultsIn total, 58 patients (39.4%) had successful ECVs and 89 (60.6%) had failed ECV. Preprocedural characteristics were similar in both groups. Compared to the ECV failure group, patients with successful ECV presented less frequently (34% vs. 60%; P = 0.004) and less extended (21.3 ± 22.2% vs. 38.9 ± 27.4% of LA surface, P = 0.008) low-voltage areas. Over 55 ± 19 weeks of follow-up, AF-free survival was similar in both groups (72.7% vs. 67.8%, p = 0.39). PVI alone resulted in 83% AF-free survival among patients in the ECV successful group at 13 months.ConclusionIn approximately 40% of patients with PsAF, sinus rhythm can be restored by ECV and maintained for at least 1 month prior to catheter ablation. This clinical response is associated with less abnormal substrate as identified by left atrial voltage mapping and a procedural success rate of >80% with PVI alone.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2297055X
Volume :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.54eee3a1ca1474eb475f5487dc17b8a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2024.1416975