The Extent of Pulmonary Vein Electrical Connections Predicts the Success of Stand-Alone Pulmonary Vein Isolation in Persistent Atrial Fibrillation.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_777F9428E8D9
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
The Extent of Pulmonary Vein Electrical Connections Predicts the Success of Stand-Alone Pulmonary Vein Isolation in Persistent Atrial Fibrillation.
Journal
Journal of cardiovascular electrophysiology
ISSN
1540-8167 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1045-3873
Publication state
Published
Issued date
05/2025
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
36
Number
5
Pages
978-987
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Identification of persistent AF (PsAF) patients who may be cured with stand-alone pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) would allow more efficient ablation strategies. Intuitively, the benefit of PVI is expected to be lower when PVs are poorly connected, but this assumption has never been tested.
Evaluate whether the circumferential extent of PV connections assessed pre-ablation predicts the success rate of PVI.
Consecutive patients with PsAF undergoing first ablation with stand-alone PVI were included. The extent of PV electrical connection was assessed using a circular mapping catheter and graded as limited, moderate, or extensive, according to tertiles of the mean numbers of bipoles recording PV potentials along the circumference of each vein.
One hundred and forty-eight patients were included (age 64 ± 9.7 years, PsAF duration 7.3 ± 7 months). After a mean follow-up of 38.6 ± 7.8 months, freedom from arrhythmia recurrence after last PVI was significantly lower in patients with limited (38.6%), compared to moderate, and extensive PV connections (69.7% and 69%, respectively; p = 0.002). While redo PVI procedures did not significantly affect final ablation outcomes in patients with limited PV connections, a significant incremental arrhythmia-free survival gain was observed with increasing extent of PV connections (p < 0.01).
The circumferential extent of PV connections is correlated to the success rate of PVI in patients with PsAF and may be a marker of the contribution of PVs to AF. The finding of limited PV connections may be used to select patients who may benefit from first-line adjunctive ablation.
Evaluate whether the circumferential extent of PV connections assessed pre-ablation predicts the success rate of PVI.
Consecutive patients with PsAF undergoing first ablation with stand-alone PVI were included. The extent of PV electrical connection was assessed using a circular mapping catheter and graded as limited, moderate, or extensive, according to tertiles of the mean numbers of bipoles recording PV potentials along the circumference of each vein.
One hundred and forty-eight patients were included (age 64 ± 9.7 years, PsAF duration 7.3 ± 7 months). After a mean follow-up of 38.6 ± 7.8 months, freedom from arrhythmia recurrence after last PVI was significantly lower in patients with limited (38.6%), compared to moderate, and extensive PV connections (69.7% and 69%, respectively; p = 0.002). While redo PVI procedures did not significantly affect final ablation outcomes in patients with limited PV connections, a significant incremental arrhythmia-free survival gain was observed with increasing extent of PV connections (p < 0.01).
The circumferential extent of PV connections is correlated to the success rate of PVI in patients with PsAF and may be a marker of the contribution of PVs to AF. The finding of limited PV connections may be used to select patients who may benefit from first-line adjunctive ablation.
Keywords
Humans, Pulmonary Veins/surgery, Pulmonary Veins/physiopathology, Atrial Fibrillation/surgery, Atrial Fibrillation/physiopathology, Atrial Fibrillation/diagnosis, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Catheter Ablation/adverse effects, Action Potentials, Aged, Recurrence, Time Factors, Electrophysiologic Techniques, Cardiac, Treatment Outcome, Heart Rate, Retrospective Studies, Progression-Free Survival, Risk Factors, Predictive Value of Tests, catheter ablation, persistent atrial fibrillation, pulmonary vein activity, pulmonary vein connection, pulmonary vein isolation
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
14/03/2025 16:01
Last modification date
17/05/2025 7:09