Back to Search Start Over

Pulmonary Vein Isolation Versus Defragmentation

Authors :
Stephan Willems
Arian Sultan
Benjamin Schäffer
Daniel Steven
Julia Vogler
Julia Moser
Jakob Lüker
Doreen Schreiber
Helge Servatius
Boris A. Hoffmann
Source :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 66:2743-2752
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

Background Long-term success rates using ablation for persistent atrial fibrillation (AF) are disappointing and usually do not exceed 60%. Objectives This study sought to compare arrhythmia-free survival between pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) and a stepwise approach (full defrag) consisting of PVI, ablation of complex fractionated electrograms, and additional linear ablation lines in the setting of atrial tachycardias (AT) in patients with persistent AF after PVI. Methods From November 2010 to February 2013, 205 patients (151 men; 61.7 ± 10.2 years of age) underwent de novo ablation for persistent AF. Subsequently, patients were prospectively randomized to either PVI alone (n = 78) or full defrag (n = 75), with 52 patients not randomized due to AF termination with the original PVI. The primary endpoint was recurrence of any AT after a blanking period of 3 months. Results During the entire study, 241 ablations were performed (mean: 1.59 in the PVI-alone group, 1.55 in the full-defrag group). With the stepwise approach, termination of AF occurred in 45 (60%) patients. However, arrhythmia-free survival did not differ whether patients underwent single or multiple procedures (p = 0.468). Procedure duration, fluoroscopy time, and radiofrequency duration were significantly longer in the full-defrag group (all p Conclusions A stepwise approach aimed at AF termination does not seem to provide additional benefit over PVI alone in patients with persistent AF, but it is associated with significantly longer procedural and fluoroscopic duration as well as radiofrequency application time. (The Randomized Catheter Ablation of Persist End Atrial Fibrillation Study [CHASE-AF]; NCT01580124 )

Details

ISSN :
07351097 and 01580124
Volume :
66
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3d8c9ac0425293a1de1c4a669e5ffb97
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2015.09.088