Chenxu Luo, Bing Leng, Xinzhi Yu, Xianfeng Du, Huimin Chu, Shenyuan Zhou, Caijie Shen, Mingjun Feng, Yongxing Jiang, He Jin, Guohua Fu, Lipu Yu, Binhao Wang, Yibo Yu, Weidong Zhuo, Fang Gao, Yin Xu, Yijun Sun, Jiating Dai, Luigi Di Biase
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: The achievement of first-pass isolation (FPI) during pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) generally serves as a reliable marker of lesion quality in initial radiofrequency encirclement and predicts favorable procedural outcomes. This study sought to evaluate the impact of the FPI on the long-term clinical outcomes in persistent atrial fibrillation (PeAF) patients undergoing radiofrequency ablation.
Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of 346 patients with PeAF who were divided into three groups: patients with FPI in bilateral PVs (BOTH group, n = 197), those with FPI in either ipsilateral PVs (EITHER group, n = 92), and those without FPI in bilateral PVs (NEITHER group, n = 57). Achieving FPI in at least one of the two ipsilateral PVs (at least ipsilateral FPI, IFPI) was utilized as a metric for evaluation. The primary endpoint was freedom from atrial tachyarrhythmias (ATAs) lasting longer than 30s beyond the blanking period. Baseline characteristics, procedural results and long-term clinical outcomes were compared among the groups.
Result: The FPI was effectively achieved in 251 left PVs (72.5%) and 235 right PVs (67.9%). After a median follow-up of 658(402, 970) days, the NEITHER group exhibited less freedom from ATAs recurrence than the BOTH group (57.9% vs. 75.1%, P < 0.001) or the EITHER group (57.9% vs. 70.7%, P = 0.036). IFPI was an independent predictor of freedom from ATAs recurrence in PeAF patients undergoing their initial ablation (HR, 0.46; 95% CI, 0.29-0.74; P = 0.001).
Conclusion: Achieving FPI for PVI remained a significant association with improved ablation outcomes in PeAF patients, wherein IFPI served as an important determinant.
期刊介绍:
Frontiers? Which frontiers? Where exactly are the frontiers of cardiovascular medicine? And who should be defining these frontiers?
At Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine we believe it is worth being curious to foresee and explore beyond the current frontiers. In other words, we would like, through the articles published by our community journal Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine, to anticipate the future of cardiovascular medicine, and thus better prevent cardiovascular disorders and improve therapeutic options and outcomes of our patients.