Literature DB >> 31076543

Evaluation of myocardial injury induced by different ablation approaches (radiofrequency ablation versus cryoablation) in atrial flutter patients: a meta-analysis.

Qing Zeng1, XingSan Li1, Ge Xu2.   

Abstract

Background: To evaluate myocardial injury in Atrial flutter (AFL) patients undergoing Radiofrequency ablation (RF) and cryoablation (CRYO) treatments.
Methods: We conducted a systematic search on PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, and CBM databases. All relevant clinical trials (up to October 2018) on myocardial injury in AFL patients were retrieved and subsequent results analyzed with a random-effects model or a fixed-effects model.
Results: A total of eight clinical trials with a sample size of 644 patients, were identified and incorporated in the present study. The results indicated no significant differences in creatine kinase (CK) levels (mean difference (MD) = 62.74, P=0.46; 4-6 h and MD = 30.73, P=0.49; 12-24 h after ablation), creatine kinase MB(CK-MB) levels (MD = 17.32, P=0.25; 12-24 h post-ablation), troponinI (TnI) levels (MD = 0.12, P=0.08; 6 h after ablation), and troponin T (TnT) levels (MD = 0.30, P=0.08; 4-6 h post-ablation) between the two treatment approaches. However, patients receiving CRYO xhibited higher levels of CK (MD = 179.54, P=0.04; tested immediately after the procedure), CK-MB (MD = 10.08, P=0.004) 4-6 h after ablation, and TnT (MD = 0.19, P=0.002) tested the next morning. Moreover, those patients had a significantly reduced pain perception (odds ratio (OR) = 0.05, P=0.04) compared with those in the RF group.
Conclusion: These results indicate that CRYO in comparison with RF significantly increases myocardial injury in AFL patients. Additionally, it decreases pain perception during the procedure. Further large-sampled studies are needed to support these findings.
© 2019 The Author(s).

Entities:  

Keywords:  Atrial flutter; Cryoablation; Radiofrequency; meta-analysis; myocardial injury; pain perception

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31076543      PMCID: PMC6533206          DOI: 10.1042/BSR20182251

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biosci Rep        ISSN: 0144-8463            Impact factor:   3.840


Background

Atrial flutter (AFL) is a macroreentrant tachycardia propagating clockwise or counterclockwise through the cavotricuspid isthmus (CTI) and can cause stroke, heart failure, and significant subjective symptoms. To date, catheter ablation remains the recommended therapy for a wide variety of arrhythmias [1]. Ablation, whether radiofrequency ablation (RF) or cryoablation(CRYO) the two widespread ablation procedures, is the curative treatment for AFL [2,3]. Several studies have indicated an increase in myocardial injury biomarkers such as troponin T (TnT), [4,5] troponinI (TnI), [6-8] creatine kinase (CK), [9,10] and or its creatine kinase MB(CK-MB) after RF [10,11]. RF ablation can potentially cause serious complications [12,13]. CRYO of CTI, an alternative therapeutic approach, has been shown to reduce pain during the ablation procedure and decrease the risk of damage to the right coronary artery and the conduction system [14-17]. Our aim was to study and comparatively evaluate changes in levels of necrotic biomarkers, and the resulting pain perception during energy application.

Methods

Data sources and search strategy

The present meta-analysis was performed in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) guidelines [18,19]. PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, and CBM databases were searched using the following keywords: Radiofrequency, Cryoablation, Atrial flutter, myocardial injury, and pain perception. No restrictions were imposed on language or date of publication. The final search was run on 1 October 2018. Additional searches were performed based on retrieved articles aiming to identify studies missed by prior searches.

Study selection

All randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and quasi RCTs with a target population of AFL patients were included in the present study. The study selection diagram is shown in Figure 1. Randomized, crossover studies were also considered for inclusion.
Figure 1

Selection process of studies included in the meta-analysis

RCTs with different outcomes than the ones of interest, studies lacking a comparable control or placebo, animal studies, reviews, meeting abstracts, and case-only studies were excluded.

End point definition

End points of the present study are as follows: ‘CK levels (4–6 h and 12–24 h after ablation) (U/l)’, ‘CK-MB levels (4–6 h and 12–24 h after ablation) (U/l)’, ‘TnI levels (6 h post-ablation) (µg/l)’, ‘TnT levels (4–6 h after ablation and next morning) (µg/l)’, and ‘pain perception’.

Data extraction and quality assessment

Data were extracted by two independent reviewers using a standardized data-extraction protocol and disagreements were resolved by consensus. Extracted data included: (i) study characteristics (title, first author name, year of publication, design, and duration); (ii) participant characteristics (age, sex, body mass index, presence of other chronic diseases such as hypertension, diabetes); (iii) outcome (CK levels, CK-MB levels, TnI levels, TnT levels, and pain perception). The quality of each RCT was evaluated using the Cochrane risk of bias instrument which, primarily assesses randomization and allocation concealment, the blinding process of individuals involved in the trial, the completeness of follow-up, and the outcome. Each study outcome was classified as ‘low risk of bias’, ‘unclear’, or ‘high risk of bias’.

Data synthesis and statistical analysis

Statistical analysis was conducted by the Cochrane Review Manager (RevMan version 5.3). Continuous and dichotomous outcomes were analyzed using respectively mean differences (MDs) and pooled odds ratio (OR) to combine different tests and measurement scales within each domain. The overall effect estimates were calculated using inverse variance weighted fixed-effects analysis with a 95% confidence interval (CI). Standard deviations (SDs) were calculated using the following formula: SD = square root [(SD pretreatment)2 + (SD post-treatment)2 – (2R × SD pre-treatment × SD post-treatment)], assuming a correlation coefficient of (R) = 0.5. Based on the Cochran Q statistic, heterogeneity among studies was identified using a standard χ2 test and a P-value (two-sided) [20]. I index, as the percentage of variation across studies, was used to assess heterogeneity with I values of 25, 50 or 75% representing low, moderate, or high heterogeneity, respectively [21]. The fixed-effect model was used for analysis when I < 50% and the random-effect model when I ≥ 50%. Subgroup analysis or sensitivity analysis methods were used to explore the sources of heterogeneity and to explain possible causes. We planned to construct a funnel plot for risk of publication bias evaluation given that the number of included studies was greater than 10.

Results

Study selection and characteristics

Of the initial 1160 studies identified by our primary search strategy, 58 duplicates were identified and removed. Further 949 studies were excluded after review of their titles and abstracts. Among the remaining 153 studies qualified for full-text review, 145 were excluded for the reason that 55 were published in the form of meta-analysis, abstracts, short communications or brief reports, 38 were animal studies, 24 were duplicated studies, and 28 did not report the outcomes of interest. Finally, six RCTs and two non-RCTs with a total sample size of 644 patients and an average follow-up period of 1day to 9 months were included in the present study (Figure 1 and Tables 1 and 2). The risk of bias among the included trials was generally low.
Table 1

Characteristics of eight clinical trials included in the meta-analysis

Study, yearStudy designFollow-up timeOutcome
Hernández-Romero, 2013 [22]Non-random, Unblind, Control2 monthsCK, CK-MB, TnI
Oswald, 2007 [23]Non-random, Unblind, Control1 dayCK, CK-MB, TnT
Saygi, 2016 [24]Single-blinded, Random, Control1 dayTnI
Thornton, 2008 [16]Random, Control9 monthsCK, CK-MB, TnT, Pain perception
Bastani, 2012 [14]Single-blinded, Random, Control6 monthsPain perception
Timmermans, 2003 [15]Random, Control6 monthsPain perception
Malmborg, 2009 [28]Random, Control6 monthsPain perception
Kuniss, 2009 [29]Random, Control3 monthsPain perception
Table 2

Characteristics of patients from eight clinical trials included in the meta-analysis

Study, yearSubjects (male)Age (years)Sex (male, %)Hypertension (%)Diabetes (%)Body mass index (%)
Test GroupControl GroupTest GroupControl GroupTest GroupControl GroupTest GroupControl GroupTest GroupControl GroupTest GroupControl Group
Hernández-Romero, 2013 [22]121061.265.1757541.76033.32027.729.5
Oswald, 2007 [23]10962688010037.537.537.537.53027
Saygi, 2016 [24]78756565919239255810099
Thornton, 2008 [16]323055568493NRNRNRNRNRNR
Bastani, 2012 [14]78756565917939.722.75.18NRNR
Timmermans, 2003 [15]775555585.771.414.328.6NRNRNRNR
Malmborg, 2009 [28]2020576085902525NRNR27.224.7
Kuniss, 2009 [29]9091656577.883.547.851.61018.7NRNR

NR: Not described.

NR: Not described. Detailed summary of involved studies and corresponding outcomes is as follows: four studies with CK levels as an outcome (three studies with a total of 22 patients in the CRYO group and 19 patients in the RF group and a timeline of 4–6 h post-ablation [16,22,23]; three studies with a total of 22 patients in the CRYO group and 19 patients in the RF group and a timeframe of 12–24 h [22,23,25]); three studies with CK-MB levels as an outcome of interest (three studies with a 4–6 h timeline, 22 patients in the CRYO group and 19 in RF group [16,22,23]; two studies with a 12–24 h timeline, 44 patients in the CRYO group and 40 in RF group [16,22]); two studies with TnI levels as an outcome (a time period of 6 h, a total of 90 patients enrolled in the CRYO group and 85 in the RF group [22,24]); two studies with TnT levels as an outcome of interest (a timeframe of 4–6 h and the next morning after ablation, 42 patients in the CRYO group and 39 patients in the RF group [16,23]) and finally, five studies with pain perception as outcome (CRYO, 227 patients; RF, 223 patients [14-16,28,29]).

Risk of bias in included studies and quality of evidence

The overall quality of the included studies, evaluated by the Cochrane risk of biases tool, was moderated and is shown in Figures 2 and 3. All studies were considered to have a low risk of bias in selective reporting according to the review of their protocols. All trials were regarded as having an unclear risk in other bias domain.
Figure 2

Risk of bias graph

Figure 3

Risk of bias summary

Efficacy outcomes

Serum CK levels

Substantial heterogeneity in serum CK levels was observed among studies with a significant increase seen in the CRYO group compared with the RF groups (MD = 179.54, 95%CI (95% confidence interval) (10.09, 348.98), P=0.04) minutes after the procedure (Figure 4A). Although not statistically significant, an increase in CK levels could be seen at 4–6 h (MD = 62.74, 95%CI (−101.92, 227.40), P=0.46) (Figure 4B) and 12–24 h (MD = 30.73, 95%CI (−55.89, 117.35), P=0.49) (Figure 4C) after ablation in the CRYO group.
Figure 4

Forest plot for changes in serum CK levels

Serum CK-MB levels

Substantial heterogeneity in serum CK-MB levels was observed among studies 4–6 hours after ablation with a significant increase seen in the CRYO group compared with the RF group (MD = 10.08, 95%CI (3.14, 17.02), P=0.004] (Figure 5A). Additionally, a slight increase (MD = 17.32, 95%CI (−12.45, 47.10), P=0.25) (Figure 5B) in CK-MB levels can be seen 12–24 h after ablation in the CRYO group.
Figure 5

Forest plot for changes in serum CK-MB levels

Serum TnI levels

The results indicated that CRYO treatment significantly elevated TnI levels (MD = 0.12, 95%CI (−0.02, 0.26), P=0.08) 6 h after ablation (Figure 6A).
Figure 6

Forest plot for changes of serum TnI, TnT levels

Serum TnT levels

Substantial heterogeneity in serum TnT levels among studies was observed the next morning with a significant increase seen in the CRYO group as compared with RF group (MD = 0.19, 95%CI (0.07, 0.32), P=0.002] (Figure 6C). A slight increase in TnT levels was also observed 4–6 hours (MD = 0.30, 95%CI (−0.03, 0.63, P=0.08) (Figure 6B) after ablation in the CRYO group.

Pain perception

The results indicated that treatment with CRYO significantly reduced pain perception (OR = 0.05, 95%CI (0.00, 0.84), P=0.04) (Figure 7).
Figure 7

Forest plot for changes in pain perception

Discussion

In RF cases, the injury usually results in much larger lesions [30,31] and seems to be associated with the site of ablation and the number of RF application [32]. Additionally, RF seems to favor the development of inflammatory infiltrates and fibrosis. Ablation using cryothermal energy has several potential advantages including greater catheter stability due to better adherence to myocardial tissue, a lower risk of thrombus formation and systemic embolization, and a lower probability of myocardial perforation due to the preservation of tissue architecture [17,25-27,33]. This meta-analysis had several limitations. First, a susceptibility to bias due to smaller sample size and a limited number of clinical trials. Second, significant heterogeneity between studies could be observed. Additionally, biomarkers levels assessment started immediately after ablation. There are also several concerns regarding clinical environment under which the cardiac necrosis biomarkers were used and then compared across different studies. In the work of Oswald et al. [23], patients with normal baseline values of cardiac biomarkers were included, while in the study of Thornton et al. [16] and Hernandez-Romero et al. [22], authors did not provide conditions under which patients were included in the study, as well as the basal level of their cardiac biomarkers. Therefore, it is difficult to assess and compare the effects of different studies since the clinical environment. Therefore, the lack of baseline made it impossible to determine the confounding effect of baseline characteristics accurately. Third, there are risks of inaccurate conclusions due to potential heterogeneity among studies in terms of trial protocols, study populations, duration of ablation treatment. In summary, meta-analysis conclusions still need to be demonstrated by additional high-quality, large-sampled clinical studies.

Conclusions

The present study indicates that CRYO significantly reduces pain perception and lowers discomfort during ablation. What was more, CRYO exhibited a higher occurrence of myocardial injury in comparison with RF.

Declarations

All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards. Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants included in the study.
  33 in total

Review 1.  Statistical heterogeneity in systematic reviews of clinical trials: a critical appraisal of guidelines and practice.

Authors:  Julian Higgins; Simon Thompson; Jonathan Deeks; Douglas Altman
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2.  Myocardial injury during radiofrequency catheter ablation: comparison of focal and linear lesions.

Authors:  J Carlsson; A Erdogan; N Guettler; B Schulte; D Lay; J Neuzner; C W Hamm; H F Pitschner
Journal:  Pacing Clin Electrophysiol       Date:  2001-06       Impact factor: 1.976

3.  Randomized study comparing radiofrequency ablation with cryoablation for the treatment of atrial flutter with emphasis on pain perception.

Authors:  Carl Timmermans; Gregory M Ayers; Harry J G M Crijns; Luz-Maria Rodriguez
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2003-03-11       Impact factor: 29.690

4.  The effect of radiofrequency catheter ablation on myocardial creatine kinase activity.

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5.  Transcatheter cryoablation of ventricular myocardium in dogs.

Authors:  M K Wadhwa; M M Rahme; J Dobak; H Li; P Wolf; P Chen; G K Feld
Journal:  J Interv Card Electrophysiol       Date:  2000-10       Impact factor: 1.900

6.  Detection of myocardial injury during radiofrequency catheter ablation by measuring serum cardiac troponin I levels: procedural correlates.

Authors:  A S Manolis; V Vassilikos; T Maounis; H Melita-Manolis; L Psarros; A Haliasos; D V Cokkinos
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  1999-10       Impact factor: 24.094

7.  Prospective randomized comparison of durability of bidirectional conduction block in the cavotricuspid isthmus in patients after ablation of common atrial flutter using cryothermy and radiofrequency energy: the CRYOTIP study.

Authors:  Malte Kuniss; Thomas Vogtmann; Rodolfo Ventura; Stephan Willems; Jürgen Vogt; Gerian Grönefeld; Stefan Hohnloser; Bernhard Zrenner; Ali Erdogan; Gunnar Klein; Bernd Lemke; Jörg Neuzner; Thomas Neumann; Christian W Hamm; Heinz-Friedrich Pitschner
Journal:  Heart Rhythm       Date:  2009-09-11       Impact factor: 6.343

8.  Comparative determination and monitoring of biomarkers of necrosis and myocardial remodeling between radiofrequency ablation and cryoablation.

Authors:  Diana Hernández-Romero; Francisco Marín; Vanessa Roldán; Pablo Peñafiel; Juan Antonio Vilchez; Esteban Orenes-Piñero; José Antonio Giner; Mariano Valdés; Arcadio García-Alberola
Journal:  Pacing Clin Electrophysiol       Date:  2012-10-18       Impact factor: 1.976

9.  Acute and long-term efficacy and safety of catheter cryoablation of the cavotricuspid isthmus for treatment of type 1 atrial flutter.

Authors:  Gregory K Feld; James P Daubert; Raul Weiss; William M Miles; William Pelkey
Journal:  Heart Rhythm       Date:  2008-03-21       Impact factor: 6.343

10.  Biochemical markers of myocardial damage after radiofrequency ablation.

Authors:  Jacek Bednarek; Igor Tomala; Jacek Majewski; Jacek Szczepkowski; Jacek Lelakowski
Journal:  Kardiol Pol       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 3.108

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