Abstract

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most prevalent sustained arrhythmia in clinical practice. It is associated with significant morbidity and mortality and has been identified as an independent risk factor for ischemic stroke and thromboembolic events. Catheter ablation has become an established rhythm control therapy in patients with highly symptomatic drug-refractory AF. The definition of ablation success remains controversial since current symptom-based or intermittent electrocardiogram monitoring strategies fail to sufficiently disclose rhythm outcome. This failure is mainly related to the high incidence of asymptomatic AF recurrences, the unpredictable nature of arrhythmia relapses, and the poor correlation of symptoms and AF episodes. There is a clear correlation between the intensity of the monitoring strategy and the sensitivity for it to detect arrhythmia recurrences. Furthermore, several clinical studies assessing the long-term efficacy of catheter ablation procedures have reported late AF recurrences in patients who were initially considered responders to catheter ablation. In certain subsets of patients, precise long-term monitoring may help to guide therapy, e.g. patients in whom withdrawal of antithrombotic therapy may be considered if they are free of arrhythmia recurrences. Recently, sub-cutaneous implantable cardiac monitors (ICM) have been introduced for prolonged and continuous rhythm monitoring. The performance of a leadless ICM equipped with a dedicated AF detection algorithm has recently been assessed in a clinical trial demonstrating a high sensitivity and overall accuracy for identifying patients with AF. The clinical impact of ICM-based follow-up strategies, however, has to be evaluated in prospective clinical trials.

Highlights

  • Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common sustained cardiac rhythm disturbance in clinical practice affecting 1-2 % of the general population with the prevalence increasing with age [1,2]

  • This review focuses on the clinically relevant aspects of current follow-up strategies after catheter ablation for AF and their implications on “ablation success”

  • The definition of ablation success remains controversial since currently applied rhythm detection strategies are based on symptom-reporting and intermittent ECG recording and substantially underestimate the “true” rate of AF recurrences

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Summary

Introduction

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common sustained cardiac rhythm disturbance in clinical practice affecting 1-2 % of the general population with the prevalence increasing with age [1,2]. Implantable cardiac devices, such as permanent pacemakers and defibrillators with dedicated atrial arrhythmia detection algorithms, allow for continuous rhythm monitoring with a high sensitivity and specificity [15,42,43].

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