Abstract
The impact of catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation (AFCA) on left ventricular (LV) diastolic function is still unknown. This study aimed to develop a novel risk score to predict LV diastolic dysfunction (LVDD) 12months after AFCA (12-month LVDD) and to evaluate whether the risk score was associated with cardiovascular events (cardiovascular death, transient ischemic attack/stroke, myocardial infarction, or heart failure hospitalization). We studied 397 patients with nonparoxysmal AF with preserved ejection fraction who underwent initial AFCA (age: 69years, women: 32%). LVDD was diagnosed if more than 2 of 3 variables (average E/e' ratio >14, septal e' velocity <7cm/s or lateral e' velocity <10cm/s, and tricuspid valve regurgitation velocity >2.8m/s) were present. The 12-month LVDD was observed in 89 patients (23%). A total of 4 preprocedural variables (woman, average E/e' ratio ≥9.6, age ≥74years, and left atrial diameter ≥50mm [WEAL]) were identified as predictors of 12-month LVDD on multivariable analysis. We developed a WEAL score. The prevalence of 12-month LVDD increased as WEAL scores increased (p <0.001). There was a statistically significant difference in cardiovascular events-free survival between those at high risk (WEAL score: 3 or 4) and those at low risk (WEAL score: 0, 1, or 2). (86.6% vs 97.2%, log-rank p=0.009). The WEAL score before AFCA is useful to predict 12-month LVDD after AFCA in patients with nonparoxysmal AF with preserved ejection fraction and is associated with cardiovascular events after AFCA.
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