Abstract

Focal atrial tachycardias (ATs) originating from the left and the right atrial appendage (AA) were the most difficult to eliminate. To evaluate the safety and long-term efficacy of minimally invasive surgical atrial appendectomy in combination with radiofrequency catheter ablation (RFCA) in the management of focal atrial appendage tachycardias (AATs). We included 42 consecutive patients with 42 AATs confirmed by activation mapping and contrast venography. Thirty of them were successfully managed with RFCA (RFCA-successful group), while the remaining 12 (28.6%) finally resorted to video-assisted thoracoscopic atrial appendectomy owing to RFCA failure (resort-to-surgery group). We searched for predictors of RFCA failure, and the need for surgery by using a binomial logistic regression model. In the RFCA-successful group, 6 (20.0%) patients experienced recurrence and re-do ablation and 11 (36.7%) AATs originated from distal AAs. In the resort-to-surgery group, the tachycardias involved exclusively distal AAs and required more RFCA attempts compared with those of the RFCA-successful group (1.58 ± 0.51 vs 1.20 ± 0.41; P = .0165). During atrial appendectomy, incessant ATs were terminated immediately after resection of the AA at the base. Long-term success was achieved in all 42 patients with a follow-up of 29.1 ± 17.5 months. No complications occurred. Fourteen patients with tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy recovered fully. We identified origin at distal AATs and longer time to tachycardia termination by ablation as predictors of RFCA failure and the need for surgical intervention. ATs originating from the distal portion of AA were more refractory to RFCA. The combination of catheter ablation and video-assisted thoracoscopic atrial appendectomy was an effective strategy to manage AATs.

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