Abstract

Few studies evaluated the impact of catheter ablation (CA) on atrial tachyarrhythmia (ATA) burden in paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF). In the prospective, patient-controlled CLOSE to CURE study, we determined the longer-term impact of optimized CA on ATA burden by using an insertable cardiac monitor (ICM). A total of 105 patients with paroxysmal AF were implanted with an ICM 65 (interquartile range [IQR] 61-78) days before CA. CA consisted of contact force-guided pulmonary vein isolation targeting an intertag distance of ≤6 mm and a region-specific ablation index. The primary end point was reduction in ICM-detected ATA burden; secondary end points were single-procedure freedom from ATA, quality of life, and adverse events. The mean age was 62 ± 8 years; the median CHA2DS2-VASc score was 1 (IQR 1-2); and the median left atrial diameter was 43 (IQR 39-43) mm. After pulmonary vein isolation (1.13 ± 0.39 procedures per patient), median ATA burden decreased from 2.68% (IQR 0.09%-15.02%) at baseline to 0% (IQR 0%-0%) during the first year and to 0% (IQR 0%-0%) during the second year (reduction in ATA burden 100% [IQR 100%-100%]; P < .001). Single-procedure freedom from any ATA was 87% at 1 year and 78% at 2 years. Quality of life improved significantly across all scores. Adverse events occurred in 5 patients (4.8%). CA has become an effective procedure in paroxysmal AF, with a major impact on ICM-detected ATA burden. Whereas conventional survival analysis suggests a progressive decline in efficacy, we observed that burden reduction is maintained at longer follow-up. These data imply that ATA burden is a more optimal end point for assessing ablation efficacy.

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