Abstract

Chronic lung disease (CLD) is one of the important underlying diseases of atrial fibrillation (AF). The outcomes after radiofrequency catheter ablation of AF in patients with CLD have not yet been reported. We investigated the electroanatomic alterations in pulmonary veins (PVs) in CLD patients with AF and assessed their effect on the outcomes of radiofrequency catheter ablation of AF. We assessed 15 patients who had CLD and underwent radiofrequency catheter ablation of AF. CLD included chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, a tuberculosis-destroyed lung, and interstitial lung disease. For controls, we selected 60 sex-, age-, and procedure era-matched non-CLD patients who received radiofrequency catheter ablation for AF (4 controls for each CLD patient). Eight patients had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, 6 had a tuberculosis-destroyed lung, and 1 had interstitial lung disease. PV morphology in the affected lung was altered significantly, ie, obliteration, pulling of the PVs toward the destroyed lung, or compensatory bulging of the PV antrum. These alterations were related to arrhythmogenicity in 6 (40%) of 15 patients with CLD. Non-PV foci were more common in the CLD group (4/15, 26.7%) than in the control group (3/60, 5.0%; P=0.025). All non-PV foci were located in the right atrium. The AF recurrence rate in the CLD group (26.7%, 4/15) was similar to that in the control group (18.3%, 11/60; P=0.45). Significant alteration of PV anatomy was related to arrhythmogenicity, and non-PV foci from the right atrium were commonly observed in the CLD group. Radiofrequency catheter ablation can be performed safely for AF in CLD patients with a comparable success rate to that in patients with normal lungs.

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