| Literature DB >> 34524497 |
Keisuke Usuda1, Takeshi Kato2, Toyonobu Tsuda1, Hayato Tada1, Satoru Niwa1, Soichiro Usui1, Kenji Sakata1, Kenshi Hayashi1, Hiroshi Furusho1, Masaaki Kawashiri1, Masayuki Takamura1, Takayuki Otsuka3, Shinya Suzuki3, Akio Hirata4, Masato Murakami5, Mitsuru Takami6, Masaomi Kimura7, Hidehira Fukaya8, Shiro Nakahara9, Wataru Shimizu10, Yu-Ki Iwasaki10, Hiroshi Hayashi10, Tomoo Harada11, Ikutaro Nakajima11, Ken Okumura12, Junjiroh Koyama12, Michifumi Tokuda13, Teiichi Yamane13, Yukihiko Momiyama14, Kojiro Tanimoto14, Kyoko Soejima15, Noriko Nonoguchi15, Koichiro Ejima16, Nobuhisa Hagiwara16, Masahide Harada17, Kazumasa Sonoda18, Masaru Inoue19, Koji Kumagai20, Hidemori Hayashi21, Kazuhiro Satomi22, Yoshinao Yazaki22, Yuji Watari23, Masaru Arai24, Ryuta Watanabe24, Katsuaki Yokoyama25, Naoya Matsumoto25, Koichi Nagashima24, Yasuo Okumura24.
Abstract
The impact of catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF) on cardiovascular events and mortality is controversial. We investigated the impact of sinus rhythm maintenance on major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events after AF ablation from a Japanese multicenter cohort of AF ablation. We investigated 3326 consecutive patients (25.8% female, mean age 63.3 ± 10.3 years) who underwent catheter ablation for AF from the atrial fibrillation registry to follow the long-term outcomes and use of anti coagulants after ablation (AF frontier ablation registry). The primary endpoint was a composite of stroke, transient ischemic attack, cardiovascular events, and all-cause death. During a mean follow-up of 24.0 months, 2339 (70.3%) patients were free from AF after catheter ablation, and the primary composite endpoint occurred in 144 (4.3%) patients. The AF nonrecurrence group had a significantly lower incidence of the primary endpoint (1.8 per 100 person-years) compared with the AF recurrence group (3.0 per 100 person-years, p = 0.003). The multivariate analysis revealed that freedom from AF (hazard ratio 0.61, 95% confidence interval 0.44-0.86, p = 0.005) was independently associated with the incidence of the composite event. In the multicenter cohort of AF ablation, sinus rhythm maintenance after catheter ablation was independently associated with lower rates of major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events.Entities:
Keywords: Ablation; Atrial fibrillation; Cardiovascular disease; Mortality; Stroke
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34524497 DOI: 10.1007/s00380-021-01929-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart Vessels ISSN: 0910-8327 Impact factor: 2.037