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Esophageal Endoscopy After Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation Using Ablation-Index Guided High-Power: Frankfurt AI-HP ESO-I

Authors :
Shaojie, Chen
K R Julian, Chun
Shota, Tohoku
Stefano, Bordignon
Lukas, Urbanek
Franziska, Willems
Karin, Plank
Max, Hilbert
Athanasios, Konstantinou
Nikolaos, Tsianakas
Fabrizio, Bologna
Claudia, Kreuzer
Luca, Trolese
Boris, Schmidt
Source :
JACC. Clinical electrophysiology. 6(10)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

This study sought to investigate the safety profile of a novel ablation index-guided high-power short-duration (AI-HP) pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) in terms of endoscopic esophageal lesions.The risk of esophageal injury during PVI is a major concern while ablating the posterior wall for patients with atrial fibrillation. Luminal esophageal temperature (LET) rise during ablation is a surrogate for esophageal lesion development.A total of 122 consecutive symptomatic atrial fibrillation patients underwent AI-HP PVI (50 W throughout the ablation, AI anterior wall/posterior wall: 550/400). All patients were under LET monitoring (cutoff LET 39°C) during the ablation procedure, and patients with LET rise received esophageal endoscopy examination 1 to 3 days after the ablation. Ablation lesion data of the sites with LET rise were analyzed.Procedural PVI success rate was 100%. Per procedure, the mean radiofrequency ablation time, procedural time, and fluoroscopic time were 11.9 ± 2.7 min, 54.8 ± 9 min, and 5.5 ± 1.6 min. The incidence of LET39°C was 47%, and the mean peak LET was 41.2 ± 1.8°C. The rate of endoscopic detected lesion was 2 of 57 (3.5%). No perforation or atrial-esophageal fistula was found. The mean contact force, application duration, impedance drop, and AI values at the sites with LET rise were 22.1 ± 8.9 g, 7 ± 2.4 s, 9.4 ± 4.6 Ω, and 419 ± 44.6.AI-HP (50 W) ablation appears to be a highly efficient ablation technique for PVI. The incidence of esophageal injury during AI-HP PVI seems markedly low. AI-HP ablation targeting AI 400 in combination with multisensor esophageal temperature monitoring for the left atrial posterior wall appears safe and efficient.

Details

ISSN :
24055018
Volume :
6
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JACC. Clinical electrophysiology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........b7f90e02f73609180f749d354f4a7f95