Abstract

Abstract Background Data from the European Atrial Fibrillation (AF) Ablation Long-Term Registry suggest that there are significant differences in the volume of AF ablation procedures performed across different centers even in the same country. If these differences in AF ablation volume between centers reflect regional, socioeconomic, infrastructural/technical or other disparities has not been addressed till now. Purpose The aim of this study was to investigate patient and non-patient related differences among European AF ablation centers according to the volume of AF ablations performed. Methods Data for this analysis originate from the European AF Ablation Long-Term Study, a prospective registry designed to describe the clinical epidemiology of patients undergoing AF ablation. Based on 25th and 75th percentiles of AF ablation numbers performed, the participating centers were classified into high volume (HV) (≥250 procedures/year), medium volume (MV) (<250 and ≥58/year) and low volume (LV) (<58/year). Patient (demographics, comorbidities) and non-patient (center infrastructure, procedural characteristics) related differences were assessed. Results A total of 91 centers in 26 European countries enrolled 3368 patients. There were no significant differences concerning regional distribution, hospital/cardiology facilities or services provided among centers with the exception of electrophysiology procedures and labs which were more abundant in HV centers (p=0.02 and <0.001 respectively). HV and MV centers ablate twice more cases of long-standing persistent and persistent AF compared to LV centers, in which paroxysmal AF reaches 78.9% of all cases (Figure A). Accordingly, first AF ablation procedure was far more frequent in LV centers compared to MV and HV (85.8% vs 76.0% vs 76.1% respectively, p<0.001). Even though HV centers ablate significantly more high risk patients (CHA2DS2-VASc score ≥2 51.4% in HV vs 46.5% in MV vs 37.2% in LV, p<0.001) (Figure B) with accompanying comorbidities, applying more elaborate ablation techniques, fluoroscopy time and radiation dose were higher among patients undergoing AF ablation in LV centers (p<0.001 for all). Despite the above-mentioned dissimilarities, Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, based on adjusted data, demonstrated non-significant differences in complication rate (p=0.402) or AF recurrence rate (p=0.363) among HV, MV and LV centers. Conclusions Volume of AF ablations in a center is not correlated with regional or infrastructural characteristics. The higher volume in HV centers consists mainly by more long-term persistent AF and higher risk patients, suggesting that differences in volume reflect differences in experience and personnel's commitment towards AF ablation.

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