| Literature DB >> 33236221 |
Kazuki Iso1, Koichi Nagashima1, Masaru Arai1, Ryuta Watanabe1, Katsuaki Yokoyama2, Naoya Matsumoto2, Takayuki Otsuka3, Shinya Suzuki3, Akio Hirata4, Masato Murakami5, Mitsuru Takami6, Masaomi Kimura7, Hidehira Fukaya8, Shiro Nakahara9, Takeshi Kato10, Hiroshi Hayashi11, Yu-Ki Iwasaki11, Wataru Shimizu11, Ikutaro Nakajima12, Tomoo Harada12, Junjiroh Koyama13, Ken Okumura13, Michifumi Tokuda14, Teiichi Yamane14, Kojiro Tanimoto15, Yukihiko Momiyama15, Noriko Nonoguchi16, Kyoko Soejima16, Koichiro Ejima17, Nobuhisa Hagiwara17, Masahide Harada18, Kazumasa Sonoda19, Masaru Inoue20, Koji Kumagai21, Hidemori Hayashi22, Yoshinao Yazaki23, Kazuhiro Satomi23, Yuji Watari24, Yasuo Okumura25.
Abstract
Whether ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF) is, in terms of clinical outcomes, beneficial for Japanese patients has not been clarified. Drawing data from 2 Japanese AF registries (AF Frontier Ablation Registry and SAKURA AF Registry), we compared the incidence of clinically relevant events (CREs), including stroke/transient ischemic attack (TIA), major bleeding, cardiovascular events, and death, between patients who underwent ablation (n = 3451) and those who did not (n = 2930). We also compared propensity-score matched patients (n = 1414 in each group). In propensity-scored patients who underwent ablation and those who did not, mean follow-up times were 27.2 and 35.8 months, respectively. Annualized rates for stroke/TIA (1.04 vs. 1.06%), major bleeding (1.44 vs. 1.20%), cardiovascular events (2.15 vs. 2.49%) were similar (P = 0.96, 0.39, and 0.35, respectively), but annualized death rates were lower in the ablation group than in the non-ablation group (0.75 vs.1.28%, P = 0.028). After multivariate adjustment, the risk of CREs was statistically equivalent between the ablation and non-ablation groups (hazard ratio [HR] 0.89, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.71-1.11), but it was significantly low among patients who underwent ablation for paroxysmal AF (HR 0.68 [vs. persistent AF], 95% CI 0.49-0.94) and had a CHA2DS2-VASc score < 3 (HR 0.66 [vs. CHA2DS2-VASc score ≥ 3], 95% CI 0.43-0.98]). The 2-year risk reduction achieved by ablation may be small among Japanese patients, but AF ablation may benefit those with paroxysmal AF and a CHA2DS2-VASc score < 3.Entities:
Keywords: Ablation; Atrial fibrillation; Bleeding; Clinically relevant events; Stroke
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33236221 DOI: 10.1007/s00380-020-01721-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart Vessels ISSN: 0910-8327 Impact factor: 2.037