Abstract

Abstract Background/introduction Epicardial left atrial appendage (LAA) clipping is an effective strategy for stroke prophylaxis in high thromboembolic (TE) and bleeding risk patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). In addition to LAA exclusion from systemic circulation, clipping promotes concomitant appendage isolation, which might have positive impacts on arrhythmia control. Purpose The aim of this study was to report safety, success rate, and the long-term clinical outcomes of LAA clipping in a large cohort of AF patients undergoing concomitant hybrid ablation. Methods Consecutive patients undergoing hybrid AF ablation between 2013 and 2023 were enrolled. Hybrid ablation was performed in a one-step procedure consisting of thoracoscopic epicardial radiofrequency (RF) ablation followed by endocardial mapping and ablation, if needed. Ablation lesion set included pulmonary vein (PV) and posterior wall (PW) isolation, as well as RF applications to the LAA/posterolateral ridge. LAA clipping was performed via Atriclip exclusion system (Atricure, Inc., The Nederlands) after epicardial ablation. Additional endocardial lesions were performed in case of incomplete epicardial ablation or at physician’s discretion. Results A total of 130 patients were included (mean age: 65±9.4; 72.3% males); among them, 19.2% and 55.4% had persistent or long-standing persistent AF, respectively. Mean CHA2DS2-VASC and HAS-BLED were 3.1±1.1 and 2.3+-0.5. Five patients (3.8 %) had absolute contraindication to long-term oral anticoagulation, 3 (2.3%) had previous life-threatening bleeding events, 17 (13.1%) had a previous TE event. The final clip size was 35mm in 90.7% cases. Acute success was achieved in 97.7%; failure was due to LAA size (n=1), proximity to phrenic nerve (n=1), or bypass graft (n=1). One patient had incomplete occlusion due to a large secondary lobe, which required a second clip. No periprocedural complications related to clipping were documented. At a mean follow-up of 51±35 months, one (0.8%) patient had a stroke and 3 (2.3%) a transient ischemic attack (4 events per 552 patient/years; 0.7%). One patient had a microreentrant tachycardia mapped from the area near the LAA clipping. Conclusion In a large cohort undergoing hybrid AF ablation, epicardial LAA clipping was safe and highly successful. Acute failure was rare and due to LAA morphology or proximity to phrenic nerve and bypass graft. Thromboembolic event rate was very low.

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