Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (Aug 2023)

Catheter ablation of concomitant atrial fibrillation improves survival of patients undergoing transcatheter edge-to-edge mitral valve repair

  • Felix Ausbuettel,
  • Sebastian Barth,
  • Georgios Chatzis,
  • Dieter Fischer,
  • Sebastian Kerber,
  • Julian Mueller,
  • Julian Mueller,
  • Stephan List,
  • Philipp Halbfass,
  • Thomas Deneke,
  • Holger Nef,
  • Holger Nef,
  • Hans-Helge Mueller,
  • Dimitar Divchev,
  • Bernhard Schieffer,
  • Ulrich Luesebrink,
  • Christian Waechter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2023.1229651
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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BackgroundAtrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common concomitant disease in patients undergoing transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (TEER) for mitral regurgitation (MR) and detrimentally affects their outcome. While there is increasing evidence for prognostic improvement and safety of catheter ablation (CA) of AF in the overall cohort of heart failure patients, corresponding data in TEER patients are lacking.ObjectivesTo investigate the impact of treatment regimens for concomitant AF on survival of TEER patients.MethodsIn a multicenter observational cohort study consecutive patients successfully undergoing TEER were analyzed and survival of patients receiving CA of concomitant AF was compared with that of patients on pharmacological AF treatment and with that of patients without a history of AF, using propensity score matching (PSM).ResultsA total of 821 patients were analyzed. Of these, 608 (74.1%) had concomitant AF, of whom 48 patients received CA. Patients with CA in AF showed significantly higher 3-year-survival after TEER compared to PSM-patients on pharmacological AF treatment (75.5% [36/48] vs. 49.4% [166/336], p = 0.009). The 3-year-survival after TEER of patients with concomitant AF treated with CA was not significantly different from PSM-patients without AF (75.5% [36/48] vs. 68.3% [98/144], p = 0.36).ConclusionsCA of AF is superior to pharmacotherapy as it significantly improves the survival of TEER patients in a PSM analysis. CA even offsets the prognostic disadvantage of coexisting AF in TEER patients. Given the growing evidence of prognostic benefits in the overall cohort of HF patients, our data point out the importance of treating concomitant AF and support CA as an essential part of a holistic management of TEER patients.

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