Abstract

Abstract Introduction Acute pulmonary vein (PV) reconnection is frequently encountered in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) subjected to PV isolation (PVI). Purpose In this prospective, multicenter, randomized study, we investigated whether the identification and ablation of sites along the circumferential line with specific electrogram criteria indicative of nontrasmurality, after initial achievement of PVI, reduces acute PV reconnection rate. Methods Patients referred for AF ablation at five European centers were enrolled. PVI with antral circumferential isolation of ipsilateral PVs was performed using a contact force sensing ablation catheter delivering 35–40W at the anterior/superior and 30W at the posterior wall with target ablation index of 550 at the anterior wall/roof and 400 at the posterior/inferior segments. Following PVI, mapping with the ablation catheter was performed to identify residual potentials (RP) along the ablation line, defined as bipolar amplitude ≥0.2 mV or 0.1–0.19 mV combined with negative component of the unipolar electrogram as recorded by the 3D mapping system. Ipsilateral PV sets with RPs were randomized to either no further ablation (Group B) or to additional ablation of RPs (Group C). The primary study endpoint was defined as spontaneous or adenosine-mediated recovery of conduction after 30-minute waiting period which was also evaluated in ipsilateral PV sets without residual potentials (Group A). Results In total, 109 patients (59.3±10.6 years, 47% hypertension, 9.3% diabetes, left atrial diameter 39.1±4.6mm) were enrolled in the study. After initial isolation of 194 PV pairs, 98 PV pairs had no RPs (Group A) while the remaining 96 with RPs were randomized to either Group B or C (48 PV pairs each). The number of sites with RPs did not differ between groups B and C (4.1±2.5 vs 4.7±3.2, p=0.27). The occurrence of the primary endpoint in Group A was 7.1%. Ablation of residual potentials resulted in significant reduction of spontaneous or adenosine mediated reconnection (14.6% vs 47.9%, p<0.001). Conclusion Following initial PVI achievement, ablation of RPs along the antral circumferential line reduces spontaneous or adenosine-mediated acute PV reconnection rate in patients undergoing first-time AF ablation. Therefore, scanning of the PVI line in search of weak links with specific electrogram criteria indicative of nontrasmurality, and subsequent deployment of bonus lesions, could represent a convenient and practical way to reduce acute PV reconnection. Further studies are required to assess long term effects on AF recurrence rates. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding sources: None.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call