Low-voltage-area ablation in addition to PVI improved AF/AT-recurrence-free rates compared to PVI alone in persistent AF patients with a left atrial diameter > 44 mm (62.5% vs. 43.4%, p=0.016).
RCT (n=342)
Randomized
Does pulmonary vein isolation followed by left atrial low-voltage-area ablation improve AF/AT recurrence-free rates in persistent AF patients with left atrial LVAs?
Low-voltage-area ablation in addition to PVI significantly improves AF/AT recurrence-free rates in persistent AF patients with advanced left atrial enlargement (LAD > 44 mm).
Absolute Event Rate: 62.5% vs 43.4%
p-value: p=0.016
Abstract Background A randomized controlled SUPPRESS-AF trial showed that the efficacy of low-voltage-area (LVA) ablation was highly dependent on the degree of atrial remodeling, while the efficacy was not statistically significant in total patients. Purpose The purpose of this subanalysis of SUPPRESS-AF trial was to compare the efficacy of LVA ablation in each patient group classified according to left atrial diameter (LAD) which is commonly used atrial remodeling index. Methods SUPPRESS-AF trial included persistent AF patients with left atrial LVAs and compared rhythm outcomes between patients randomized to undergo pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) followed by left atrial LVA ablation (LVA-ABL group, n=170) or PVI alone (PVI-alone group, n=172). In this post-hoc sub-analysis, the patients in the either of the two randomly allocated groups were further divided into 2 groups using a median LAD of 44 mm. Results There was no difference in AF/AT recurrence-free rates between patients with LAD 44 mm and ≤ 44 mm (60.1% vs. 53.7%, p=0.261). Among patients with LAD 44 mm, LVA-ABL group demonstrated higher AF/AT-recurrence-free rate than PVI-alone group (62.5% vs. 43.4%, p = 0.016, Figure 1). On the other hand, no difference in AF/AT recurrence-free rate was found between the 2 groups in patients with LAD ≤ 44 mm (60.8% vs. 59.6%, p=0.986). Hazard ratios of AF/AT recurrence in the LVA-ABL group to the PVI-alone group stratified by left atrial revealed that the efficacy of LVA ablation appears to become more pronounced with increasing LAD (Figure 2). Conclusions The efficacy of LVA ablation in addition to PVI for the treatment of persistent AF was more pronounced in patients with a large left atrium.
Masuda et al. (Sat,) conducted a rct in Persistent atrial fibrillation with left atrial low-voltage areas (n=342). Pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) followed by left atrial LVA ablation vs. PVI alone was evaluated on AF/AT recurrence-free rate in patients with LAD > 44 mm (p=0.016). Low-voltage-area ablation in addition to PVI improved AF/AT-recurrence-free rates compared to PVI alone in persistent AF patients with a left atrial diameter > 44 mm (62.5% vs. 43.4%, p=0.016).