Pulsed Field Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation in Patients with Heart Failure: Insight from the ATHENA registry.
Data on pulsed-field ablation (PFA) for atrial fibrillation (AF) in patients with heart failure (HF) are limited.
To evaluate clinical outcomes of PFA in patients with AF and HF, stratified by HF subtype.
Consecutive patients undergoing first-time pentaspline PFA within the ATHENA registry were analyzed. Patients were stratified into three groups: no HF, HF with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF, LVEF ≥50%), and HF with mildly reduced or reduced EF (HFmrEF/rEF, LVEF <50%). The primary endpoint was freedom from documented atrial arrhythmias >30 seconds after a 2-month blanking period. AAD use was left to physician discretion.
Among 1,224 patients included (68.5% with paroxysmal AF and 31.5% with persistent AF), 176 (14.4%) had HF: 40 (3.3%) with HFpEF and 136 (11.1%) with HFmrEF/rEF. The Kaplan-Meier estimated freedom from any atrial arrhythmias at 1-year follow-up was 79.9%, with higher rate in the no-HF group (81.0%) vs the HF group (73.3%, HR=1.5, 95%CI: 1.1-2.1, p=0.0133). Considering separately paroxysmal and persistent AF form, paroxysmal AF patients with no sign of HF showed significantly higher freedom from atrial arrhythmias (82.2%) than patients with HF (68.6%, 2.0, 1.3-3.1, p=0.0028), while no differences were found in patients with persistent AF (77.9% vs 76.4%, 1.1, 0.7-1.7, p=0.7065).
PFA with the pentaspline catheter appears to be an effective treatment for AF in patients with HF. Freedom from AF and atrial arrhythmias post-PFA was highest in patients with paroxysmal AF and no history of HF, with no significant differences observed in persistent AF patients.
To evaluate clinical outcomes of PFA in patients with AF and HF, stratified by HF subtype.
Consecutive patients undergoing first-time pentaspline PFA within the ATHENA registry were analyzed. Patients were stratified into three groups: no HF, HF with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF, LVEF ≥50%), and HF with mildly reduced or reduced EF (HFmrEF/rEF, LVEF <50%). The primary endpoint was freedom from documented atrial arrhythmias >30 seconds after a 2-month blanking period. AAD use was left to physician discretion.
Among 1,224 patients included (68.5% with paroxysmal AF and 31.5% with persistent AF), 176 (14.4%) had HF: 40 (3.3%) with HFpEF and 136 (11.1%) with HFmrEF/rEF. The Kaplan-Meier estimated freedom from any atrial arrhythmias at 1-year follow-up was 79.9%, with higher rate in the no-HF group (81.0%) vs the HF group (73.3%, HR=1.5, 95%CI: 1.1-2.1, p=0.0133). Considering separately paroxysmal and persistent AF form, paroxysmal AF patients with no sign of HF showed significantly higher freedom from atrial arrhythmias (82.2%) than patients with HF (68.6%, 2.0, 1.3-3.1, p=0.0028), while no differences were found in patients with persistent AF (77.9% vs 76.4%, 1.1, 0.7-1.7, p=0.7065).
PFA with the pentaspline catheter appears to be an effective treatment for AF in patients with HF. Freedom from AF and atrial arrhythmias post-PFA was highest in patients with paroxysmal AF and no history of HF, with no significant differences observed in persistent AF patients.
Authors
Schiavone Schiavone, Solimene Solimene, Dello Russo Dello Russo, Bianchi Bianchi, Iacopino Iacopino, Malacrida Malacrida, Rossillo Rossillo, Themistoclakis Themistoclakis, Bertini Bertini, Meynet Meynet, Moltrasio Moltrasio, Schillaci Schillaci, Casella Casella, Bisignani Bisignani, Colella Colella, Russo Russo, Volpicelli Volpicelli, Bandino Bandino, Zingarini Zingarini, Mitacchione Mitacchione, Casula Casula, Fassini Fassini, Rordorf Rordorf, De Sanctis De Sanctis, De Simone De Simone, Rovaris Rovaris, Zucchelli Zucchelli, Tondo Tondo
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