Erschienen in:
17.01.2018 | Original Paper
Acute and long-term outcome of focal atrial tachycardia ablation in the real world: results of the german ablation registry
verfasst von:
Sonia Busch, Mathias Forkmann, Karl-Heinz Kuck, Thorsten Lewalter, Hüseyin Ince, Florian Straube, Heinrich Wieneke, K. R. Julian Chun, Lars Eckardt, Claus Schmitt, Matthias Hochadel, Jochen Senges, Johannes Brachmann
Erschienen in:
Clinical Research in Cardiology
|
Ausgabe 5/2018
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Abstract
Introduction
Catheter ablation of focal atrial tachycardia (FAT) can be a challenging procedure and results have been rarely described. The purpose of this study was to determine the characteristics and results of FAT ablation in the large cohort of the German Ablation Registry.
Methods
The German Ablation Registry is a nationwide prospective multicenter database including 12566 patients who underwent an ablation procedure between 2007 and 2010. Among them 431 (3.4%) underwent an FAT ablation and 413 patients with documented locations were analyzed. Patients were divided into three groups according to the FAT location: biatrial (BiA, n = 31, 7.5%), left atrial (LA, n = 110, 26.5%), and right atrial (RA, n = 272, 66%).
Results
Acute success rate was 84% (68 vs. 85 vs. 85% in biA, LA, and RA, respectively, p = 0.038). 4.8% of patients had an early recurrence during hospitalization, most in biatrial location (p < 0.001). No major acute complication occurred. At 12 months, 81% were asymptomatic or improved. The incidence of major adverse cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events (MACCE) was 3.7%. Arrhythmia freedom without antiarrhythmic drugs was 58% and was lower in biA (34 vs. 56% in LA vs. 62% in RA, p = 0.019). Early recurrence during hospitalization was an outstanding predictive factor for recurrence during follow-up.
Conclusion
In this large patient population, FAT ablation had a relatively high acute success rate with a low complication rate. During follow-up, the recurrence rate was high, particularly in biatrial location. This was frequently predicted by an early recurrence during hospitalization.