Heart Rhythm O2 (Aug 2024)

Repeat ablation of atrial fibrillation using electrogram dispersion to identify additional areas of mechanistic significance

  • Junaid A.B. Zaman, MA (Oxon), BMBCh, FRCP (Edin), PhD,
  • Abdulhaseeb Khan, MS,
  • Jan Nielsen, MD, PhD,
  • Steen B. Kristiansen, MD, PhD,
  • Mads B. Kronborg, MD, DMSc, PhD,
  • Christoffer T. Witt, MD, PhD,
  • Christian Gerdes, MD, PhD,
  • Jens Kristensen, MD, PhD,
  • Henrik K. Jensen, MD, PhD,
  • Peter Lukac, MD, PhD,
  • Sharad C. Agarwal, MBBS

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 8
pp. 543 – 550

Abstract

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Background: Electrogram dispersion identifies putative atrial fibrillation (AF) drivers in first time ablation procedures, with high acute termination rates and long-term outcomes akin to extensive ablation approaches. Its use in a population that had undergone repeat ablation is unknown, particularly where the pulmonary veins are already isolated. Objective: This purpose of this study was to assess electrogram dispersion mapping during repeat ablation procedures for persistent AF. Methods: One hundred sixty-seven patients from the United Kingdom and Denmark, all with persistent AF recurrence after prior ablation procedure(s), were mapped using a five splined catheter for electrogram dispersion before ablation. Areas were manually tagged on biatrial electroanatomic maps and ablated once pulmonary vein isolation was confirmed or reisolated if required. All patients had 12-month continuous monitoring, with most of the cohort having follow-up beyond 24 months. Results: Of the 167 patients [53 (32%) female; mean age 66 ± 8 years; mean left atrial (LA) diameter 4.8 cm; mean ejection fraction 53%], 108 had pulmonary veins already isolated. Dispersion sites occurred in both atria (3.2 LA, 1.4 right atrium). Acute termination to sinus rhythm occurred in 71 (42%) of the cohort patients, with a further 73 (44%) terminating to atrial tachycardia/flutter. At 12-month follow-up, 95% of patients were free of AF, with 74% overall freedom from all atrial arrhythmias. Heart failure and severely enlarged LA predicted recurrence, and termination to sinus improved freedom from all atrial arrhythmias. Conclusion: Dispersion mapping is a promising approach at repeat ablation procedures for persistent AF, with high acute termination rates and good clinical outcomes. Further prospective randomized trials are needed to evaluate this approach in a population that had undergone repeat ablation.

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