| Literature DB >> 33737960 |
Irene Martín de Miguel1,2,3, Pablo Ávila1,2,3.
Abstract
The increasing prevalence of AF in a growing population of adults with congenital heart disease (CHD) poses new challenges to clinicians involved in the management of these patients. Distinctive underlying anatomies, unique physiological aspects, a high diversity of corrective surgeries and associated comorbidities can complicate clinical decision-making. In this review, the authors provide an overview of the current knowledge on epidemiology and pathophysiology, with a special focus on the differences to the non-CHD population and the clinical impact of AF in adults with CHD. Acute and long-term management strategies are summarised, including the use of antiarrhythmic drugs, catheter or surgical ablation and prophylaxis of thromboembolism. Finally, gaps of knowledge and potential areas of future research are highlighted.Entities:
Keywords: Atrial fibrillation; adult congenital heart disease; antiarrhythmic drugs; anticoagulation; atrial arrhythmias; catheter ablation
Year: 2021 PMID: 33737960 PMCID: PMC7967824 DOI: 10.15420/ecr.2020.41
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Cardiol ISSN: 1758-3756
Evidence of Acute Pharmacological Cardioversion in Adult Congenital Heart Disease
| Study | Design | n | Age | Type of CHD | Type of AT | Drug | Dosage | CV Achieved | Adverse Events§ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hoyer et al. 2007[ | Retrospective | 19 | 16 (6 months–34 years) | Simple 11% | AFL 95% | Ibutilide | 1 mg IV in 10 min | One dose 47% | 1% TdP |
| Wells et al. 2009[ | Retrospective | 20 | 30 (19–53) years | Simple 5% | AF 35% | Dofetilide | 125 μg twice daily* | 85%† | 10%TdP |
| Koyak et al. 2013[ | Retrospective | 92 | 51 ± 16 years | Simple 50% | AF 68% | Adenosine | Not reported for acute management | 90%‡ | Not reported for acute management |
| Banchs et al. 2014[ | Retrospective | 13 | 40 ± 11 years | Simple 15% | AF 15% | Dofetilide | 250 μg twice daily* | 70% | 10% TdP |
| El-Assaad et al. 2016[ | Retrospective | 64 | 42 ± 14 years | Simple 14% | AF 55% | Dofetilide | 125 μg twice daily* | 68% | 1.5%TdP |
*Based on creatinine clearance. †Includes maintenance of sinus rhythm in patients with sinus rhythm at dofetilide administration. ‡Includes electrical cardioversion. §Resulting in drug discontinuation. AFL = atrial flutter; AT = atrial tachycardia; CHD = congenital heart disease; CV = cardioversion; IART = intra-atrial reentrant tachycardia; NSVT = non-sustained ventricular tachycardia; QTc = corrected QT interval; SND = sinus node dysfunction; TdP = torsades de pointes; VT = ventricular tachycardia.
Evidence of Catheter Ablation for AF in Adults With Congenital Heart Disease
| Study | Design | n | Follow-up | Age | Type of CHD | Type of AF | Procedure | Success Rate | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Philip et al. 2012[ | Retrospective | 36 CHD | 7 months | 53 ± 2 years CHD | Simple 71% | pAF | RF (8 mm): | Without AADs: | No differences between CHD and NSHD |
| Sohns et al. 2018[ | Retrospective | 57 | 41 ± 36 months | 51.1 ± 14.8 years | Simple 61.4% | pAF 36.8% | Irrigated tip RF: | 1st procedure 63% (1 year), 22% (5 years) | Success independent from CHD complexity and AF type |
| Abadir et al. 2019[ | Retrospective | 10 | 2.8 | 57.9 years | Simple 80% | pAF 80% | Cryoablation: | 1st procedure 60% (1 year): 40% without AADs | 1 transient phrenic nerve palsy |
| Liang et al. 2019[ | Retrospective | 84 | 709 ± 808 | 51.5 ± 12.1 years | Simple 60.7% | pAF 45.2% | RF:† | 53.1% (1 year) without AADs | Trend to less success in complex CHD (not significant) |
| Guarguagli et al. 2019[ | Retrospective | 58 | 24 (11–69) months | 51 years | Simple 43% | pAF 45% | Irrigated tip RF: | 1st procedure 32.8% | Predictors of recurrence: |
*1% in the congenital heart disease cohort and 7% in the non-congenital structural heart disease cohort were permanent forms of AF. †Type of ablation catheter not specified.AAD = antiarrhythmic drug; CFAE = complex fractionated atrial electrogram; CHD = congenital heart disease; CTI = cavotricuspid isthmus; EA = electroanatomical; FAA = focal activity ablation; GP = ganglionated plexus; HD = high density; ICE = intracardiac echocardiography; LL = linear lesions; SNI = simultaneous non-invasive; NSHD = non-congenital structural heart disease; pAF = paroxysmal AF; perAF = persistent AF; PVI = pulmonary vein isolation; RF = radiofrequency.