AimsCatheter ablation of long-lasting persistent atrial fibrillation (AF) has been performed with varying results using a combination of different techniques. Whether arrhythmia termination during ablation is associated with an improved clinical outcome is controversial.Methods and resultsIn this prospective study, 153 consecutive patients (56 ± 10 years) underwent catheter ablation of persistent AF (25 ± 33 months) using a stepwise approach with the desired procedural endpoint being AF termination. Repeat ablation was performed for patients with recurrent AF or atrial tachycardia (AT) after a 1 month blanking period. A minimum follow-up of 12 months with repeated Holter monitoring was performed. Atrial fibrillation was terminated in 130 patients (85). There was a lower incidence of AF in those patients in whom AF was terminated during the index procedure compared with those who had not (5 vs. 39 P < 0.0001, mean follow-up 32 ± 11 months). Seventy-nine patients underwent repeat procedures: 64/130 in the termination group (6 AF, 58 AT) and 15 in the non-termination group (9 AF, 7 AT). After repeat ablation, sinus rhythm was maintained in 95 in whom AF was terminated compared with 52 in those in whom AF could not be terminated.ConclusionProcedural termination of long-lasting AF by catheter ablation alone is associated with an improved outcome.
CITATION STYLE
O’Neill, M. D., Wright, M., Knecht, S., Jaïs, P., Hocini, M., Takahashi, Y., … Haïssaguerre, M. (2009). Long-term follow-up of persistent atrial fibrillation ablation using termination as a procedural endpoint. European Heart Journal, 30(9), 1105–1112. https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehp063
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