Safety and effectiveness of very-high-power, short-duration ablation in patients with atrial fibrillation: Preliminary results.

QDot MicroTM ablation atrial fibrillation pulmonary vein isolation vHPSD

Journal

Cardiology journal
ISSN: 1898-018X
Titre abrégé: Cardiol J
Pays: Poland
ID NLM: 101392712

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
02 Jan 2023
Historique:
received: 30 08 2022
accepted: 25 11 2022
revised: 12 11 2022
entrez: 2 1 2023
pubmed: 3 1 2023
medline: 3 1 2023
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) is at the forefront of rhythm control strategies in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). A very-high-power, short-duration (vHPSD) catheter, QDot MicroTM (Biosense Webster) was designed to improve the effectiveness of AF ablation within a shorter procedure time. The aim of this study was to compare the effectiveness and safety of PVI ablation between this vHPSD ablation mode and conventional ablation-index-guided ablation (ThermoCool Smarttouch SF catheter). This single-center, retrospective, observational study enrolled 108 patients with AF, referred for catheter ablation between December 16, 2019 and December 3, 2021. In 54 procedures (mean age: 58.0 ± 12.3; 66.67% male), a QDot MicroTM catheter was used (vHPSD-group), and 54 patients (mean age: 57.2 ± 11.8; 70.37% male) were treated with a ThermoCool SmarttouchTM SF catheter (AI-group). The primary endpoint was freedom from AF 3 months after ablation. Atrial fibrillation was found to recur in 14.81% of patients in the vHPSD-group and in 31.48% of patients in the AI-group (p = 0.07). There was no difference in treatment-emergent adverse events between the two groups (6.3% vs. 0%; p = 0.10). One severe adverse event (a cerebral vascular accident) was observed in the vHPSD-group. The mean dose of remifentanil was reported to be lower during QDot MicroTM catheter-based PVI (p < 0.01). The vHPSD-based PVI was associated with shorter radiofrequency application time (p < 0.001), fluoroscopy time (p < 0.0001), and total procedure time (p < 0.0001). This study suggests vHPSD ablation is safe, can reduce the dosage of analgesics during significantly shorter procedures and may enhance the success rate of catheter-based PVI.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) is at the forefront of rhythm control strategies in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). A very-high-power, short-duration (vHPSD) catheter, QDot MicroTM (Biosense Webster) was designed to improve the effectiveness of AF ablation within a shorter procedure time. The aim of this study was to compare the effectiveness and safety of PVI ablation between this vHPSD ablation mode and conventional ablation-index-guided ablation (ThermoCool Smarttouch SF catheter).
METHODS METHODS
This single-center, retrospective, observational study enrolled 108 patients with AF, referred for catheter ablation between December 16, 2019 and December 3, 2021. In 54 procedures (mean age: 58.0 ± 12.3; 66.67% male), a QDot MicroTM catheter was used (vHPSD-group), and 54 patients (mean age: 57.2 ± 11.8; 70.37% male) were treated with a ThermoCool SmarttouchTM SF catheter (AI-group). The primary endpoint was freedom from AF 3 months after ablation.
RESULTS RESULTS
Atrial fibrillation was found to recur in 14.81% of patients in the vHPSD-group and in 31.48% of patients in the AI-group (p = 0.07). There was no difference in treatment-emergent adverse events between the two groups (6.3% vs. 0%; p = 0.10). One severe adverse event (a cerebral vascular accident) was observed in the vHPSD-group. The mean dose of remifentanil was reported to be lower during QDot MicroTM catheter-based PVI (p < 0.01). The vHPSD-based PVI was associated with shorter radiofrequency application time (p < 0.001), fluoroscopy time (p < 0.0001), and total procedure time (p < 0.0001).
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
This study suggests vHPSD ablation is safe, can reduce the dosage of analgesics during significantly shorter procedures and may enhance the success rate of catheter-based PVI.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36588315
pii: VM/OJS/J/91645
doi: 10.5603/CJ.a2022.0118
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Auteurs

Karolina Mitrzak (K)

1st Department of Cardiology, Medical University of Warsaw, Poland. mitrzakkarolina@gmail.com.

Michał Peller (M)

1st Department of Cardiology, Medical University of Warsaw, Poland.

Bartosz Krzowski (B)

1st Department of Cardiology, Medical University of Warsaw, Poland.

Cezary Maciejewski (C)

1st Department of Cardiology, Medical University of Warsaw, Poland.

Paweł Balsam (P)

1st Department of Cardiology, Medical University of Warsaw, Poland.

Michał Marchel (M)

1st Department of Cardiology, Medical University of Warsaw, Poland.

Marcin Grabowski (M)

1st Department of Cardiology, Medical University of Warsaw, Poland.

Piotr Lodziński (P)

1st Department of Cardiology, Medical University of Warsaw, Poland.

Classifications MeSH