Abstract

Atrial functional mitral regurgitation (AFMR) is a subtype of functional mitral regurgitation due to longstanding atrial fibrillation (AF) or heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. The variation in AFMR' definition and the common mode of treatment described in the literature remain unknown. We performed a scoping review of studies that surgically treated AFMR to characterize the existing variability in the definition of AFMR, the type of operations performed for AFMR valvulopathy, and the treatment for the chronic AF. We searched Medline, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, Scopus, and Web of Science since their inceptions for studies of patients affected by AFMR and surgically treated for their valvulopathy. Twelve studies (n = 494 patients) met eligibility criteria. All studies excluded patients with signs of left ventricular (LV) dysfunction, but the way additional parameters were used to define AFMR at a more granular level varied across studies: nine studies (75%) used the presence of AF to define their AFMR cohorts, with five (41.2%) requiring a history of AF of >1 year; additionally, the threshold values for the LV ejection fraction differed (45%-55%). Isolated mitral annuloplasty was performed in 96.2% of patients. Broad variability was detected in the proportion of patients undergoing the Cox-Maze procedure (range, 17.8%-79.5%), pulmonary vein isolation (0.0%-66.7%), and left atrial appendage ligation (0.0%-100.0%). AFMR remains variably defined in surgical studies, making comparisons across studies difficult. Mitral annuloplasty was most commonly performed. The proportion of AFMR patients undergoing concomitant procedures for AF varied substantially.

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