Literature DB >> 27381589

Cryoballoon or radiofrequency ablation for symptomatic paroxysmal atrial fibrillation: reintervention, rehospitalization, and quality-of-life outcomes in the FIRE AND ICE trial.

Karl-Heinz Kuck1, Alexander Fürnkranz2, K R Julian Chun2, Andreas Metzner3, Feifan Ouyang3, Michael Schlüter3, Arif Elvan4, Hae W Lim5, Fred J Kueffer5, Thomas Arentz6, Jean-Paul Albenque7, Claudio Tondo8, Michael Kühne9, Christian Sticherling9, Josep Brugada10.   

Abstract

AIMS: The primary safety and efficacy endpoints of the randomized FIRE AND ICE trial have recently demonstrated non-inferiority of cryoballoon vs. radiofrequency current (RFC) catheter ablation in patients with drug-refractory symptomatic paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF). The aim of the current study was to assess outcome parameters that are important for the daily clinical management of patients using key secondary analyses. Specifically, reinterventions, rehospitalizations, and quality-of-life were examined in this randomized trial of cryoballoon vs. RFC catheter ablation. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Patients (374 subjects in the cryoballoon group and 376 subjects in the RFC group) were evaluated in the modified intention-to-treat cohort. After the index ablation, log-rank testing over 1000 days of follow-up demonstrated that there were statistically significant differences in favour of cryoballoon ablation with respect to repeat ablations (11.8% cryoballoon vs. 17.6% RFC; P = 0.03), direct-current cardioversions (3.2% cryoballoon vs. 6.4% RFC; P = 0.04), all-cause rehospitalizations (32.6% cryoballoon vs. 41.5% RFC; P = 0.01), and cardiovascular rehospitalizations (23.8% cryoballoon vs. 35.9% RFC; P < 0.01). There were no statistical differences between groups in the quality-of-life surveys (both mental and physical) as measured by the Short Form-12 health survey and the EuroQol five-dimension questionnaire. There was an improvement in both mental and physical quality-of-life in all patients that began at 6 months after the index ablation and was maintained throughout the 30 months of follow-up.
CONCLUSION: Patients treated with cryoballoon as opposed to RFC ablation had significantly fewer repeat ablations, direct-current cardioversions, all-cause rehospitalizations, and cardiovascular rehospitalizations during follow-up. Both patient groups improved in quality-of-life scores after AF ablation. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01490814.
© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Atrial fibrillation; Catheter ablation; Cryoballoon; Follow-up; Radiofrequency; Rehospitalization

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27381589      PMCID: PMC5070448          DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehw285

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Heart J        ISSN: 0195-668X            Impact factor:   29.983


Introduction

FIRE AND ICE was the first large randomized controlled trial to compare the efficacy and safety of the single-step cryoballoon ablation technique with the point-by-point radiofrequency current (RFC) ablation approach in symptomatic patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF).[1] The trial confirmed its primary efficacy objective of the non-inferiority of cryoballoon ablation at 1 year with estimated event rates (first documented recurrence of AF, occurrence of atrial flutter or atrial tachycardia, use of antiarrhythmic drugs, or repeat ablation outside a 90-day blanking period) of 34.6% in the cryoballoon and 35.9% in the RFC arm [hazard ratio (HR) = 0.96; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.76–1.22; P < 0.001 for non-inferiority]. Overall safety was also not significantly different (1 year Kaplan–Meier event rate estimates, 10.2% with cryoballoon and 12.8% with RFC; HR = 0.78; 95% CI: 0.52–1.18; P = 0.24). While the first FIRE AND ICE report focused on primary outcomes, this current report will focus on secondary endpoints and additional analyses that have important implications on daily clinical practice, including all-cause rehospitalization after the index procedure (which encompasses all repeat ablations for atrial arrhythmias), cardiovascular and non-cardiovascular rehospitalizations, and direct-current cardioversions (DCCVs). Also, the analysis includes an assessment of the quality-of-life surveys for both mental and physical function throughout the 30 months of follow-up.

Methods

Study design and procedure overview

The FIRE AND ICE trial (NCT01490814) was a multicentre, randomized, blinded-outcomes, parallel-group evaluation of cryoballoon and RFC catheter ablation in patients being treated for drug-refractory and symptomatic paroxysmal AF.[1,2] A study design manuscript and the primary endpoints have been separately published.[1,2] In brief, each treatment centre approved the study design with their local ethics review committee(s), and patient informed consent was obtained prior to enrolment. Patients were randomized to either cryoballoon ablation using the Arctic Front™ family of catheters (Medtronic) or RFC catheter ablation using the ThermoCool® series of catheters (Biosense Webster). During the index procedure, the (1:1) randomly selected ablation modality was used in the left atrium to electrically isolate the pulmonary veins (PVs).[3-5] In the cryoballoon procedures, pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) was achieved using fluoroscopic guidance to position the cryoballoon catheter. Once PV-to-balloon occlusion was confirmed by retrograde radiopaque contrast agent retention, circumferential ablation was performed by freezing with a ‘single-shot’ delivery of coolant to the balloon. In the RFC procedure, PVI was achieved using a focal ‘point-by-point’ catheter approach, which delivers heat energy to the cardiac tissue. RFC lesion sets encircle the PV antra using electroanatomical mapping for guidance. In both cohorts, a PVI-only strategy was used to ablate AF, and acute index procedure success was documented in both arms with diagnostic testing. All investigators demonstrated the success of PVI by the abolition of conduction of atrial impulses into the PVs. After the index procedure, subjects were followed in this study for up to 33 months.[1,2] In both groups, subjects were followed-up for a mean time of 1.54 ± 0.8 years.[1] In the publication of the primary endpoints, the data were presented as time-to-first event reported per subject, and a 90-day blanking period was predefined.[1] Recurrences of atrial arrhythmias and repeat ablations within the 90-day blanking period did not contribute towards the primary endpoint.[1] However, robust clinical data were collected (on reinterventions and rehospitalizations) in this trial both within the 90-day blanking period and after the primary endpoint event to allow for the analyses of the current presented endpoints. The data presented in this current analysis are the total clinical events that were documented in this trial from the index procedure through the study exit for each subject to provide a comprehensive summary of the disease burden to the patients and to the healthcare systems.

Rehospitalization

During the trial, study sites were required to report all patient rehospitalizations after the index ablation procedure.[2] All-cause rehospitalizations are inclusive of every recorded event, and cardiovascular rehospitalizations are a subset of all-cause rehospitalizations. Both repeat ablations and DCCVs are specific rehospitalization events that occur within cardiovascular rehospitalizations. In the study, a rehospitalization was defined as a prolonged stay (i.e. of two or more nights) or an in-patient stay of more than one calendar day (i.e. at least one overnight stay) not concurrent with the index ablation procedure. The pre-specified main causes for cardiovascular rehospitalization included (i) unstable or stable angina or atypical chest pain; (ii) syncope; (iii) transient ischaemic attack or stroke; (iv) non-fatal cardiac arrest; (v) ventricular arrhythmia; (vi) cardiac transplantation; (vii) any type of cardiovascular surgery; (viii) implantation of a pacemaker, implantable cardioverter defibrillator, or any other cardiac device; (ix) percutaneous coronary, cerebrovascular, or peripheral intervention; (x) blood-pressure-related rehospitalization; (xi) cardiovascular infection; (xii) major bleeding; (xiii) pulmonary embolism or deep vein thrombosis; and (xiv) other adjudicated cardiovascular events, including atrial arrhythmias. A complete list of cardiovascular rehospitalization events are given in the Supplementary material online (see Supplementary material online, ). Any hospital stay planned prior to the index intervention was not considered a rehospitalization in this analysis.

Quality-of-life

Quality-of-life was assessed using the Medical Outcome Study Short Form-12 (SF-12) questionnaire to evaluate the subject's mental and physical performance at baseline and every 6 months after the index ablation procedure for up to 30 months. Physical and mental health composite scores are calculated using responses to 12 questions with a response range from 0 to 100, where a 0 score indicates the lowest level of health measured by the scale and 100 indicates the highest level of health. Questionnaires were completed without input from study personnel. Additionally in this study, an estimate of generic health status was made using the EuroQol five-dimension (EQ-5D) questionnaire, during the same period of examination. The EQ-5D-3L (used in this study) measures five dimensions of health, including (i) mobility, (ii) self-care, (iii) physical activities, (iv) pain and discomfort, and (v) anxiety and depression. This survey uses a three-tier evaluation indicating no problem, some problem, or extreme problem. The EQ-5D-3L uses a scale that measures up to one, which is the best health imaginable, and all measurements (in this study) were analysed using the utility score based on the US value set.

Statistical analyses

Data analyses were conducted using the modified intention-to-treat (mITT) study populations (consistent with previous presentations of the data).[1,2] The mITT evaluation consisted of those patients that were enrolled and randomized (n = 762), with subjects removed due to screening failures (n = 6), withdrawal of consent (n = 4), declining ablation (n = 1), and being mentally unfit for study (n = 1).[1] In the mITT examination, 374 subjects comprised the cryoballoon group, and 376 subjects were included in the RFC group.[1] This cohort is inclusive of four subjects treated with a non-study RFC catheter (St. Jude Medical), and five subjects treated with a ThermoCool RFC catheter originally randomized to the cryoballoon group. Repeat ablations, rehospitalizations, and DCCVs are presented in two formats: as dot plots showing the number of events by days since the index procedure and as Kaplan–Meier event-free survival curves. Time-to-first events between the cryoballoon and RFC arms are compared with the log-rank test. Cox proportional-hazards regression model was utilized to assess consistency across subgroups for cardiovascular hospitalization rates. For each subgroup, a Wald test for interaction was performed. A subgroup interaction term was considered significant for P < 0.05. Kaplan–Meier survival curves are presented for the subgroups with significant interaction terms. Hazard ratios for hospitalization rates and subgroup hospitalization rates are estimated with a Cox proportional-hazards model. Changes in quality-of-life (SF-12 and EQ-5D-3L scores) are presented as mean ± standard deviation from baseline. Box plots are utilized to graphically display the changes in SF-12 scores over the study visits. A linear mixed model (accounting for repeated quality-of-life measurements within a subject across visits) was utilized to compare quality-of-life scores between the groups. t-Tests were utilized to assess quality-of-life changes from baseline within a group. Quality-of-life, cardiovascular rehospitalization, and repeat ablation examinations were predefined in the study protocol and the statistical analysis plan. All-cause hospitalization and DCCV analyses were not predefined; however, the data fields were present in the case report form. No adjustments were made for multiple testing. All analyses were conducted using SAS software, version 9.4 (SAS Institute), and the R statistical package, version 3.2.2 (www.r-project.org).

Results

As depicted in Figure , 49 repeat ablations were conducted in 44 subjects (44/374; 11.8%) in the cryoballoon group and 70 repeat ablations were conducted in 66 subjects (66/376; 17.6%) in the RFC group. As shown in Figure , a log-rank test confirmed that the cryoballoon group had a statistically significant lower rate of repeat ablation compared with the RFC group [HR = 0.65 (95% CI: 0.45–0.95); P = 0.03]. As shown in Figure , 210 all-cause rehospitalizations occurred in 122 subjects (122/374; 32.6%) in the cryoballoon group when compared with 267 all-cause rehospitalizations that occurred in 156 subjects (156/376; 41.5%) in the RFC group. A log-rank test confirmed that there was a statistical difference, with the cryoballoon cohort having fewer all-cause rehospitalizations [HR = 0.72 (95% CI: 0.57–0.91); P = 0.01; Figure ]. When examining cardiovascular rehospitalizations, Figure  demonstrates that 139 cardiovascular rehospitalizations occurred in 89 subjects (89/374; 23.8%) of the cryoballoon group, whereas 203 cardiovascular rehospitalizations occurred in 135 subjects (135/376; 35.9%) of the RFC group. Statistical analysis by log-rank test demonstrated that the cryoballoon group had fewer cardiovascular rehospitalizations compared with the RFC group [HR = 0.61 (95% CI: 0.47–0.80); P < 0.01; Figure ]. The entire rehospitalization data set is summarized in Table , and the cardiovascular rehospitalizations are further detailed in the Supplementary material online. Summary of rehospitalization data Repeat ablations. (A) Number of repeat ablations by days since the index ablation. (B) Kaplan–Meier event-free survival curves. All-cause rehospitalizations (A) and cardiovascular rehospitalizations (B). Both panels show the number of rehospitalizations by days since the index ablation in the upper panel and Kaplan–Meier event-free survival curves in the lower panel.

Direct-current cardioversions post-ablation

As shown in Figure , 13 DCCVs were administered during follow-up to 12 subjects (12/374; 3.2%) in the cryoballoon group, whereas 28 DCCVs were given to 24 subjects (24/376; 6.4%) in the RFC group. As illustrated in Figure , a log-rank test demonstrated a significant difference between the cryoballoon group and the RFC group with regard to DCCV after the index ablation [HR = 0.49 (95% CI: 0.25–0.98); P = 0.04]. Direct-current cardioversion. (A) Number of direct-current cardioversions by days since the index ablation. (B) Kaplan–Meier event-free survival curves.

Cardiovascular rehospitalization subgroup analyses

Subgroup analyses of cardiovascular hospitalization rates are displayed in Figure . For all subgroups, cardiovascular rehospitalization rates were consistently lower in the cryoballoon group (all HRs <1). Two subgroups had significant interaction terms, prior (history of) DCCV (P = 0.02) and CHA2DS2-VASc (P = 0.01), indicating the treatment effect as measured by cardiovascular rehospitalization rate was different within the subgroups. In the prior DCCV subgroup, cardiovascular rehospitalization rates were 20.9% (18/86) in the cryoballoon group vs. 48.9% (43/88) in the RFC group [HR = 0.34 (95% CI: 0.20–0.59); P < 0.01]. In the no prior DCCV subgroup, cardiovascular rehospitalization rates were 24.7% (71/288) in the cryoballoon group vs. 31.9% (92/288) in the RFC group [HR = 0.74 (95% CI: 0.54–1.01); P = 0.05]. The cryoballoon group had significantly lower cardiovascular rehospitalization rates in each subgroup, even more so in the prior DCCV subgroup (Figure ). In the CHA2DS2-VASc (0–1 subgroup), cardiovascular rehospitalization rates were 13.3% (22/166) in the cryoballoon group vs. 31.8% (56/176) in the RFC group [HR = 0.36 (95% CI: 0.22–0.60); P < 0.01]. In the CHA2DS2-VASc (2–5 subgroup), cardiovascular rehospitalization rates were 32.2% (67/208) in the cryoballoon group vs. 39.5% (79/200) in the RFC group [HR = 0.78 (95% CI: 0.56–1.07); P = 0.13]. The cryoballoon group had lower cardiovascular rehospitalization rates in each subgroup but more significant in the CHA2DS2-VASc 0–1 subgroup. Cox proportional-hazards regression model. (A) Subgroup analyses of cardiovascular rehospitalization. (B) Kaplan–Meier event-free survival curves by history of direct-current cardioversion subgroups. As demonstrated in Figure , there was an improvement in the quality-of-life parameters (both mental and physical) when evaluating patients with the SF-12 questionnaire throughout the 30 months of follow-up. There was no statistical difference between the ablation modalities. The improvements in both mental and physical scores were first observed at 6 months of follow-up in both ablation groups, and they were maintained throughout the study out to the 30-month follow-up visit. Table  summarizes the SF-12 and EQ-5D-3L results at 6 and 12 months, with a test of significance conducted between baseline and 6 months results. Summary of Short Form-12 and EuroQol five-dimension three-level data out to 6 and 12 months aA linear mixed model was utilized to compare groups across all study visits. No differences were observed between arms in quality-of-life metrics. b t-Test, change from baseline to 6 months. Graphs of quality-of-life (Short Form-12 physical and mental) scores. (A) Subject mental performance from baseline throughout 30 months of follow-up. (B) Physical performance of subjects throughout 30 months of follow-up. (C) The mean Short Form-12 score reported across both mental and physical scores through the 30 months of follow-up.

Trial cohorts

Throughout this analysis, the mITT cohort was utilized; however, it is noted that the study can be presented using an ‘as-treated’ cohort. Specifically, nine patients may be re-assigned to evaluate the data set by the ablation modality used in the index procedure. In an as-treated cohort, four subjects treated with a non-study RFC catheter (St. Jude Medical) were removed from the data set, and five subjects treated with a ThermoCool RFC catheter (but randomized to the cryoballoon group) were removed from the cryoballoon group and re-allocated to the RFC group. An examination of the as-treated cohorts is given in the Supplementary material online. The results of the mITT and as-treated analyses were almost identical, and only post-ablation DCCVs changed in statistical significance when examining the as-treated cohort.

Discussion

The FIRE AND ICE trial showed non-inferiority in efficacy and safety of cryoballoon vs. RFC ablation in symptomatic patients with paroxysmal AF.[1] However, the analyses of the secondary endpoints as shown in this article demonstrated significant differences during follow-up in favour of cryoballoon ablation, which are clinically relevant and of importance from a patient disease burden and health economical point of view.[6,7] Mainly, the cryoballoon ablation group had significantly fewer reinterventions (repeat ablations and DCCVs), all-cause rehospitalizations, and cardiovascular rehospitalizations. Only the quality-of-life measurements were not statistically different between groups. But both trial groups showed improvements in the mental and physical aspects of the quality-of-life assessment at 6 months after the index ablation, which were maintained throughout the 30 months of follow-up. Previous studies mainly in patients undergoing RFC ablation have shown that hospitalization rates are nearly 40% (within the first year) following AF ablation, with ∼10% occurring within the first 30 days post-ablation.[6,7] Atrial firillation-related readmission rates were as high as 22% at the 12-month follow-up.[6,7] Also, ∼10% of all patients underwent a repeat ablation, exposing patients to the same potential of procedural complications as during the index ablation.[4,6,7] In FIRE AND ICE, very similar rates were found across the entire study for repeat ablation, all-cause rehospitalization, and cardiovascular rehospitalization. However, when comparing both ablation groups, there was a decrease in rehospitalization rates for the cryoballoon group when examining relative reductions, including a 33% reduction in repeat ablations, a 50% reduction in DCCVs, a 21% reduction in all-cause rehospitalizations, and a 34% reduction in cardiovascular rehospitalizations. By comparison, the FreezeAF study (a smaller single-centre study of cryoballoon vs. RFC evaluating mostly first generation catheters; NCT00774566) did not detect a statistical difference in redo procedures (19.9% with cryoballoon vs. 19.5% with RFC; P = 0.933).[8] However, the redo procedure criteria in FreezeAF were different. Notably, redo procedures were allowed only after 6 months, and the study follow-up concluded at 12 months. Consequently, the FreezeAF study gave only a snapshot of the redo procedures that occurred within a duration of 6 months. Our discrepancy (with the FreezeAF study) potentially demonstrates that the cryoballoon reductions in reinterventions may be more observable on a larger scale (across healthcare systems or larger clinical studies); it may reflect the low usage of advanced generation ablation catheters in the FreezeAF study; and/or it may reflect the small window (time duration) of redo ablations observed in the FreezeAF study. The significant reductions in reinterventions such as repeat ablations and DCCVs indicate that the primary endpoint (i.e. time-to-first recurrence of atrial tachycardia or AF, re-initiation of antiarrhythmic drug therapy, or repeat ablation) does not fully reflect the benefit of catheter ablation in patients with AF and the technique used to achieve PVI.[4] Another important result (namely, the reduction in healthcare burden) is not reflected by the time-to-first event but by the total number of reinterventions and rehospitalizations.[9-11] In our analysis, cryoballoon ablation reduced all reintervention and rehospitalization endpoints to a significantly greater amount than RFC ablation, indicating a larger effect of cryoablation on healthcare burden reduction than compared with RFC ablation. The extent of reduction in reinterventions and rehospitalizations is not only statistically significant but also clinically relevant.[6,7] Our presented data are the main events that define the patients' perception regarding the procedural success of an AF ablation procedure. Potentially, these data are as important as the primary endpoint outcomes of a traditional clinical trial (time-to-recurrence/failure). The lower number of reinterventions and rehospitalizations also has a health economic effect, particularly in times of limited resources in most healthcare systems.[6,7] A relative reduction in repeat ablations, cardioversions, and rehospitalizations ranging from 21 to 50% as shown in this study is particularly meaningful if the overall procedural costs are taken into account. Therefore, this result should be considered when physicians need to decide which ablation modality (cryoballoon or RFC) should be selected for PVI in patients with AF. Lastly, in this study, there was an improvement in mental and physical quality-of-life that was apparent at 6 months following the index ablation and maintained throughout the 30 months of follow-up. This improvement was observed across both ablation modalities, and there was no statistical difference between ablation groups. The marked improvement at 6 months is consistent with the alleviation of atrial arrhythmia symptoms.[4] However, the SF-12 and EQ-5D-3L surveys can be imprecise tools when evaluating patient performance by ablation modalities because of the typically shorter follow-up periods when comparing between groups (<5–10 years).[12] Additionally (specific for the EQ-5D-3L), the three-level scoring system allows for wide usage because of the ease of scoring, but the survey suffers from the lack of specificity that is found in more detailed questionnaires that do not have a ceiling effect.[13,14] Importantly, longer term follow-up is needed or disease-specific questionnaires must be used when comparing between ablation modalities.

Limitations

The data presented in this study were collected during the FIRE AND ICE trial which was a non-inferiority study with a traditional 90-day blanking period - an appropriate and common clinical trial practice during the time of the subjects' enrolment into the study.[1,2,4] It is reasonable that this could have influenced some operators in some of the clinical judgement(s) (for instance, repeat ablations and DCCVs during the 90-day blanking period were performed without penalty in the data analyses of the primary endpoints), but these 90-day events were included in this current study examination of reinterventions and rehospitalizations for evaluation completeness. Also, the data examined in this study were secondary endpoints, and some analyses were not predefined but have been included due to the clinical implications to the patients.

Conclusions

When comparing cryoballoon and RFC catheter ablation in symptomatic patients with paroxysmal AF, this study demonstrated statistically significant and clinically relevant advantages for patients treated with cryoballoon ablation in terms of repeat ablations, DCCVs, all-cause rehospitalizations, and cardiovascular rehospitalizations. Both patient groups improved in quality-of-life scores after AF ablation. The endpoint events captured in this current analysis are important to the patient's perception of a successful AF ablation procedure and to the burden of disease on the healthcare systems.

Supplementary material

Supplementary material is available at

Author's contributions

M.S., F.J.K., and H.W.L. performed statistical analyses. K.-H.K. handled funding and supervision. K.-H.K., A.F., A.E., A.M., F.O., K.R.J.C., T.A., J.-P.A., C.T., C.S., M.K., and J.B. acquired the data. K.-H.K., A.F., J.B., J.P.A., K.R.J.C., C.T., F.O., C.S., and M.K. conceived and designed the research. K.-H.K., M.S., and H.W.L. drafted the manuscript. K.-H.K., M.S., J.B., and A.F. made critical revisions of the manuscript for key intellectual content.

Funding

The FIRE AND ICE trial was funded by Medtronic. Conflict of interest: K.-H.K. reports personal fees from Medtronic and Biosense Webster during the conduct of the study and personal fees from St. Jude Medical outside the submitted work. A.F. reports personal fees from Medtronic, both during the conduct of the study and outside the submitted work. A.M. reports personal fees from Medtronic outside the submitted work. K.R.J.C. reports grant support and personal fees from Medtronic during the conduct of the study and personal fees from Biosense Webster outside the submitted work. H.W.L. is an employee of Medtronic. F.J.K. is an employee of Medtronic. T.A. reports grants support and personal fees from Medtronic during the conduct of the study. J.-P.A. reports personal fees from St. Jude Medical and Biosense Webster outside the submitted work. M.K. reports personal fees from Medtronic outside the submitted work. C.S. reports personal fees and grants from Medtronic and Biosense Webster outside the submitted work. Click here for additional data file.
Table 1

Summary of rehospitalization data

Total number of events; subjects with events
Hazard ratio (95% CI) P-value
Cryoballoon (n = 374)RFC (n = 376)
All-cause rehospitalizations210; 122 (32.6%)267; 156 (41.5%)0.72 (0.57–0.91)0.01
Cardiovascular rehospitalizations139; 89 (23.8%)203; 135 (35.9%)0.61 (0.47–0.80)<0.01
Repeat ablations49; 44 (11.8%)70; 66 (17.6%)0.65 (0.45–0.95)0.03
Direct-current cardioversions13; 12 (3.2%)28; 24 (6.4%)0.49 (0.25–0.98)0.04
Table 2

Summary of Short Form-12 and EuroQol five-dimension three-level data out to 6 and 12 months

SurveyGroupaBaseline6 months
12 months
n 6 monthsDifference P-valueb n 12 monthsDifference
SF-12 mentalCryoballoon47.1 ± 10.325851.1 ± 8.94.0 ± 9.8<0.0123651.2 ± 9.43.7 ± 10.6
RFC48.9 ± 9.826750.8 ± 8.81.9 ± 9.9<0.0123050.7 ± 9.21.6 ± 10.8
SF-12 physicalCryoballoon43.7 ± 9.125847.0 ± 9.13.2 ± 8.2<0.0123647.0 ± 9.23.0 ± 8.7
RFC44.5 ± 9.526747.6 ± 8.63.1 ± 8.6<0.0123047.8 ± 8.43.3 ± 8.7
EQ-5D-3LCryoballoon0.85 ± 0.142740.89 ± 0.130.03 ± 0.14<0.012570.88 ± 0.130.03 ± 0.14
RFC0.87 ± 0.122870.88 ± 0.140.02 ± 0.140.032540.88 ± 0.130.01 ± 0.14

aA linear mixed model was utilized to compare groups across all study visits. No differences were observed between arms in quality-of-life metrics.

b t-Test, change from baseline to 6 months.

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Authors:  Gerhard Hindricks; Christopher Piorkowski; Hildegard Tanner; Richard Kobza; Jin-Hong Gerds-Li; Corrado Carbucicchio; Hans Kottkamp
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2005-07-11       Impact factor: 29.690

4.  Readmissions and repeat procedures after catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation.

Authors:  Grzegorz Opolski; Łukasz Januszkiewicz; Ewa Szczerba; Bogusława Osińska; Daniel Rutkowski; Zbigniew Kalarus; Jarosław Kaźmierczak
Journal:  Cardiol J       Date:  2015-06-23       Impact factor: 2.737

5.  Spontaneous initiation of atrial fibrillation by ectopic beats originating in the pulmonary veins.

Authors:  M Haïssaguerre; P Jaïs; D C Shah; A Takahashi; M Hocini; G Quiniou; S Garrigue; A Le Mouroux; P Le Métayer; J Clémenty
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1998-09-03       Impact factor: 91.245

6.  Cryoballoon or Radiofrequency Ablation for Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation.

Authors:  Karl-Heinz Kuck; Josep Brugada; Alexander Fürnkranz; Andreas Metzner; Feifan Ouyang; K R Julian Chun; Arif Elvan; Thomas Arentz; Kurt Bestehorn; Stuart J Pocock; Jean-Paul Albenque; Claudio Tondo
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2016-04-04       Impact factor: 91.245

7.  What is the real atrial fibrillation burden after catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation? A prospective rhythm analysis in pacemaker patients with continuous atrial monitoring.

Authors:  Daniel Steven; Thomas Rostock; Boris Lutomsky; Hanno Klemm; Helge Servatius; Imke Drewitz; Kai Friedrichs; Rodolfo Ventura; Thomas Meinertz; Stephan Willems
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2008-02-09       Impact factor: 29.983

Review 8.  The cost-utility of catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation: a systematic review and critical appraisal of economic evaluations.

Authors:  Mattias Neyt; Hans Van Brabandt; Carl Devos
Journal:  BMC Cardiovasc Disord       Date:  2013-09-26       Impact factor: 2.298

9.  Validation and comparison of EuroQoL-5 dimension (EQ-5D) and Short Form-6 dimension (SF-6D) among stable angina patients.

Authors:  Jing Wu; Yuerong Han; Fei-Li Zhao; Jin Zhou; Zhijun Chen; He Sun
Journal:  Health Qual Life Outcomes       Date:  2014-10-25       Impact factor: 3.186

10.  Cryoballoon Versus Open Irrigated Radiofrequency Ablation in Patients With Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation: The Prospective, Randomized, Controlled, Noninferiority FreezeAF Study.

Authors:  Armin Luik; Andrea Radzewitz; Meinhard Kieser; Marlene Walter; Peter Bramlage; Patrick Hörmann; Kerstin Schmidt; Nicolas Horn; Maria Brinkmeier-Theofanopoulou; Kevin Kunzmann; Tobias Riexinger; Gerhard Schymik; Matthias Merkel; Claus Schmitt
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2015-08-17       Impact factor: 29.690

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  74 in total

1.  FIRE or ICE for paroxysmal atrial fibrillation?-perspectives from the largest randomized evaluation of cryoballoon and radiofrequency ablation to date.

Authors:  Konstantinos C Siontis; Peter A Noseworthy
Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2017-03       Impact factor: 2.895

2.  2017 HRS/EHRA/ECAS/APHRS/SOLAECE expert consensus statement on catheter and surgical ablation of atrial fibrillation.

Authors:  Hugh Calkins; Gerhard Hindricks; Riccardo Cappato; Young-Hoon Kim; Eduardo B Saad; Luis Aguinaga; Joseph G Akar; Vinay Badhwar; Josep Brugada; John Camm; Peng-Sheng Chen; Shih-Ann Chen; Mina K Chung; Jens Cosedis Nielsen; Anne B Curtis; D Wyn Davies; John D Day; André d'Avila; N M S Natasja de Groot; Luigi Di Biase; Mattias Duytschaever; James R Edgerton; Kenneth A Ellenbogen; Patrick T Ellinor; Sabine Ernst; Guilherme Fenelon; Edward P Gerstenfeld; David E Haines; Michel Haissaguerre; Robert H Helm; Elaine Hylek; Warren M Jackman; Jose Jalife; Jonathan M Kalman; Josef Kautzner; Hans Kottkamp; Karl Heinz Kuck; Koichiro Kumagai; Richard Lee; Thorsten Lewalter; Bruce D Lindsay; Laurent Macle; Moussa Mansour; Francis E Marchlinski; Gregory F Michaud; Hiroshi Nakagawa; Andrea Natale; Stanley Nattel; Ken Okumura; Douglas Packer; Evgeny Pokushalov; Matthew R Reynolds; Prashanthan Sanders; Mauricio Scanavacca; Richard Schilling; Claudio Tondo; Hsuan-Ming Tsao; Atul Verma; David J Wilber; Teiichi Yamane
Journal:  Heart Rhythm       Date:  2017-05-12       Impact factor: 6.343

3.  Ablation of atrial fibrillation: single-shot techniques poised to dominate rhythm control strategies/the future is here.

Authors:  Antonis S Manolis
Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2017-03       Impact factor: 2.895

Review 4.  [Pulmonary vein isolation for atrial fibrillation : Findings from long-term follow-up].

Authors:  C-H Heeger; K-H Kuck; F Ouyang
Journal:  Herz       Date:  2017-06       Impact factor: 1.443

5.  Identification of Radiofrequency Ablation Catheter Parameters That May Induce Intracardiac Steam Pops: Direct Visualization of Elicitation in Reanimated Swine Hearts.

Authors:  Tinen L Iles; Stephen G Quallich; Paul A Iaizzo
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Transl Res       Date:  2018-11-14       Impact factor: 4.132

6.  2012 HRS/EHRA/ECAS expert consensus statement on catheter and surgical ablation of atrial fibrillation: recommendations for patient selection, procedural techniques, patient management and follow-up, definitions, endpoints, and research trial design: a report of the Heart Rhythm Society (HRS) Task Force on Catheter and Surgical Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation. Developed in partnership with the European Heart Rhythm Association (EHRA), a registered branch of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) and the European Cardiac Arrhythmia Society (ECAS); and in collaboration with the American College of Cardiology (ACC), American Heart Association (AHA), the Asia Pacific Heart Rhythm Society (APHRS), and the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS). Endorsed by the governing bodies of the American College of Cardiology Foundation, the American Heart Association, the European Cardiac Arrhythmia Society, the European Heart Rhythm Association, the Society of Thoracic Surgeons, the Asia Pacific Heart Rhythm Society, and the Heart Rhythm Society.

Authors:  Hugh Calkins; Karl Heinz Kuck; Riccardo Cappato; Josep Brugada; A John Camm; Shih-Ann Chen; Harry J G Crijns; Ralph J Damiano; D Wyn Davies; John DiMarco; James Edgerton; Kenneth Ellenbogen; Michael D Ezekowitz; David E Haines; Michel Haissaguerre; Gerhard Hindricks; Yoshito Iesaka; Warren Jackman; José Jalife; Pierre Jais; Jonathan Kalman; David Keane; Young-Hoon Kim; Paulus Kirchhof; George Klein; Hans Kottkamp; Koichiro Kumagai; Bruce D Lindsay; Moussa Mansour; Francis E Marchlinski; Patrick M McCarthy; J Lluis Mont; Fred Morady; Koonlawee Nademanee; Hiroshi Nakagawa; Andrea Natale; Stanley Nattel; Douglas L Packer; Carlo Pappone; Eric Prystowsky; Antonio Raviele; Vivek Reddy; Jeremy N Ruskin; Richard J Shemin; Hsuan-Ming Tsao; David Wilber
Journal:  Heart Rhythm       Date:  2012-03-01       Impact factor: 6.343

7.  Earliest pulmonary vein potential-guided cryoballoon ablation for atrial fibrillation.

Authors:  Yoshiaki Mizutani; Masaaki Kanashiro; Yuichiro Makino; Akinori Satake; Wataru Suzuki; Masanari Kurobe; Kouji Mizutani; Hitoshi Ichimiya; Yasuhiro Uchida; Junji Watanabe; Satoshi Ichimiya; Yasuya Inden; Toyoaki Murohara
Journal:  Heart Vessels       Date:  2019-07-11       Impact factor: 2.037

8.  Atrial fibrillation: FIRE or ICE? Cryoablation not inferior, not superior.

Authors:  Jonathan M Kalman; Prashanthan Sanders
Journal:  Nat Rev Cardiol       Date:  2016-09-14       Impact factor: 32.419

9.  Apixaban, rivaroxaban, and dabigatran use in patients undergoing catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation using the second-generation cryoballoon.

Authors:  Verena Tscholl; Abdullah Khaled-A Lsharaf; Tina Lin; Barbara Bellmann; Patrick Nagel; Klaus Lenz; Ulf Landmesser; Mattias Roser; Andreas Rillig
Journal:  Clin Cardiol       Date:  2017-08-28       Impact factor: 2.882

Review 10.  [Radiofrequency current or cryoballoon for ablation of atrial fibrillation? : Hot or cold?]

Authors:  B Reissmann; K-H Kuck; A Metzner
Journal:  Herz       Date:  2017-06       Impact factor: 1.443

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