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High-frequency low-tidal volume ventilation improves procedural and long-term clinical outcomes in persistent atrial fibrillation ablation: Prospective multicenter registry

  • Jose Osorio
  • , Daniela Hincapie
  • , Allyson L. Varley
  • , Joshua R. Silverstein
  • , Carlos D. Matos
  • , Amit J. Thosani
  • , Christopher Thorne
  • , Benjamin D'Souza
  • , Isabella Alviz
  • , Mohamed Gabr
  • , Anil Rajendra
  • , Saumil Oza
  • , Dinesh Sharma
  • , Carolina Hoyos
  • , Matthew J. Singleton
  • , Chinmaya Mareddy
  • , Alejandro Velasco
  • , Paul C. Zei
  • , William H. Sauer
  • , Jorge E. Romero

Producción científica: Articlerevisión exhaustiva

Resumen

Background: High-frequency, low-tidal volume (HFLTV) ventilation increases the efficacy and efficiency of radiofrequency catheter ablation (RFCA) of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation. Whether those benefits can be extrapolated to RFCA of persistent atrial fibrillation (PeAF) is undetermined. Objective: The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether using HFLTV ventilation during RFCA in patients with PeAF is associated with improved procedural and long-term clinical outcomes compared to standard ventilation (SV). Methods: In this prospective multicenter registry (REAL-AF), patients who had undergone pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) + posterior wall isolation (PWI) for PeAF using either HFLTV ventilation or SV were included. The primary efficacy outcome was freedom from all-atrial arrhythmias at 12 months. Secondary outcomes included procedural and long-term clinical outcomes and complications. Results: A total of 210 patients were included (HFLTV=95 vs. SV=115) in the analysis. There were no differences in baseline characteristics between the groups. Procedural time (80 [66–103.5] minutes vs 110 [85–141] minutes; P <.001), total radiofrequency (RF) time (18.73 [13.93–26.53] minutes vs 26.15 [20.30–35.25] minutes; P <.001), and pulmonary vein RF time (11.35 [8.78–16.69] minutes vs 18 [13.74–24.14] minutes; P <.001) were significantly shorter using HFLTV ventilation compared with SV. Freedom from all-atrial arrhythmias was significantly higher with HFLTV ventilation compared with SV (82.1% vs 68.7%; hazard ratio 0.41; 95% confidence interval [0.21–0.82]; P = .012), indicating a 43% relative risk reduction and a 13.4% absolute risk reduction in all-atrial arrhythmia recurrence. There was no difference in long-term procedure-related complications between the groups (HFLTV 1.1% vs SV 0%, P = .270). Conclusion: In patients undergoing RFCA with PVI + PWI for PeAF, the use of HFLTV ventilation was associated with higher freedom from all-atrial arrhythmias at 12-month follow-up, with significantly shorter procedural and RF times compared to SV, while reporting a similar safety profile.

Idioma originalEnglish (US)
Páginas (desde-hasta)432-442
Número de páginas11
PublicaciónHeart Rhythm
Volumen22
N.º2
DOI
EstadoPublished - feb 2025

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
  • Physiology (medical)

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