Abstract

Few data on atrial fibrillation (AF) progression from the first paroxysmal episode are available. The purpose of this study was to assess the progression of AF not due to potentially reversible causes in patients treated according to current guidelines recommendations that also include catheter ablation. Among 402 screened patients with first AF, 106 patients (mean age 57.5 years) were selected and followed for 5 years. Of these patients, 54 had lone AF and 52 had comorbidities. Fifty patients (61.1% with lone AF) had no further recurrence after 5 years. The remaining 56 patients within 19 months after the first episode developed recurrent paroxysmal AF requiring long-term antiarrhythmic drug therapy, which was continued in 45 patients and was stopped because of intolerance/failure in 11 patients who underwent catheter ablation. AF became persistent in 24 of the 45 patients on antiarrhythmic drug therapy and then permanent in 16, of whom 6 had refused catheter ablation at the time of persistence. No AF recurrences or AF progression occurred after ablation. Kaplan-Meier curves demonstrated that patients with comorbidities were more likely to progress than were those with lone AF (P <.001) and that patients who underwent catheter ablation were at lower risk for progression to permanent AF than were those on antiarrhythmic drug therapy (P = .029). Age, diabetes, and heart failure (P <.001) predict final progression to permanent AF. Patients with first AF and comorbidities are at higher risk for rapid progression to permanent AF, and age, diabetes, and heart failure are independent predictors. Catheter ablation rather than antiarrhythmic drug therapy is beneficial in eliminating recurrences delaying arrhythmia progression.

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