Abstract

Introduction The value of contact force information for ablation of LA anterior line is unknown. In a prospective randomized clinical trial, we investigated if information on contact force during left atrial (LA) anterior line ablation reduces total radiofrequency time and results in higher rates of bidirectional line block in patients undergoing pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) plus substrate modification. Methods We included patients with indication for pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) and additional substrate modification. For LA anterior line ablation, patients were randomized to contact force information visible (n=35) or blinded (n=37). Patients received contrast enhanced cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (cMRI) before and 3-6 months after ablation to visualize the LA anterior line. Primary endpoint was radiofrequency time to achieve bidirectional line block. Secondary endpoints were completeness of the LA anterior line on cMRI, distribution of contact force, procedural data, adverse events, and 12 months success rate. Results In 72 patients (64±9 years, 68% male), bidirectional LA anterior line block was achieved in 70 (97%) patients. Radiofrequency time to bidirectional block did not differ significantly across groups (contact force information visible 23±18min versus contact force information blinded 21±15min, p=0.50). The LA anterior line was discernable on cMRI in 40 patients (82%) without significant differences across randomization groups (p=0.46). No difference in applied contact force was found depending on cMRI line visibility. Twelve-month success and adverse event rates were comparable across groups. Conclusion Information on contact force does not significantly improve the ablation of LA anterior lines. Clinical Trial Registration The trial was registered at http://www.clinicaltrials.gov by identifier: NCT02217657.

Highlights

  • The value of contact force information for ablation of left atrial (LA) anterior line is unknown

  • Patients scheduled for catheter ablation of drug refractory persistent atrial fibrillation (AF) or for catheter reablation of AF recurrence after pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) for paroxysmal AF were eligible for study participation because of needed additional substrate modification

  • No significant differences in baseline characteristics were noted between both study groups (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

In a prospective randomized clinical trial, we investigated if information on contact force during left atrial (LA) anterior line ablation reduces total radiofrequency time and results in higher rates of bidirectional line block in patients undergoing pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) plus substrate modification. For LA anterior line ablation, patients were randomized to contact force information visible (n=35) or blinded (n=37). Whereas wide area circumferential pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) comprises the standard approach, selected patients require additional left atrial (LA) linear lesions [1]. PVI using contact force sensing catheter technology resulted in a reduced rate of immediate, intraprocedural pulmonary vein reconnection [6], and reduced rates of AF recurrence during follow-up [7]. The benefit of using contact force sensing catheter technology is unclear for the formation of LA linear lesions

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