| Literature DB >> 34854991 |
Björn Müller-Edenborn1,2, Zoraida Moreno-Weidmann3,4, Sandrine Venier5, Pascale Defaye5, Chan-Il Park6, José Guerra4, Concepcion Alonso-Martín4, Victor Bazan4, Xavier Vinolas4, Enrique Rodriguez-Font4, Bieito Campos Garcia4, Serge Boveda7, Stéphane Combes7, Jean-Paul Albenque7, Benoit Guy-Moyat8, Dietmar Trenk9, Martin Eichenlaub3, Juan Chen10, Heiko Lehrmann3, Franz-Josef Neumann11, Thomas Arentz3, Amir Jadidi12.
Abstract
AIMS: Despite advances in interventional treatment strategies, atrial fibrillation (AF) remains associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Fibrotic atrial myopathy (FAM) is a main factor for adverse outcomes of AF-ablation, but complex to diagnose using current methods. We aimed to derive a scoring system based entirely on easily available clinical parameters to predict FAM and ablation-success in everyday care.Entities:
Keywords: Atrial fibrillation; Fibrotic atrial myopathy; Pulmonary vein isolation; Risk stratification
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34854991 PMCID: PMC9424172 DOI: 10.1007/s00392-021-01973-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Res Cardiol ISSN: 1861-0684 Impact factor: 6.138
Uni- and multivariate logistic regression for FAM in the determination cohort
| All patients | No FAM | FAM | Regression analysis | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unadjusted | Adjusted | ||||||
| OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | ||||||
| Age (years) | 61.1 (11.7) | 58.2 (12.2) | 68.3 (6.3) | 1.130 (1.08–1.18) | < 0.0001 | ||
| Age > 60 years | 146 (66.4) | 87 (55.4) | 59 (93.7) | 11.868 (4.11–34.27) | < 0.0001 | 6.194 (1.94–19.8) | 0.002 |
| Female sex | 60 (27.3) | 34 (21.7) | 26 (41.3) | 2.542 (1.36–4.77) | 0.004 | 2.863 (1.28–6.4) | 0.011 |
| Body mass index (kg/sqm) | 28.0 (4.4) | 27.9 (4.2) | 28.2 (4.7) | 1.018 (0.95–1.09) | 0.598 | ||
| Arterial hypertension | 139 (63.2) | 89 (56.7) | 50 (79.4) | 2.939 (1.48–5.84) | 0.002 | 1.147 (0.49–2.70) | 0.753 |
| Diabetes mellitus | 19 (8.6) | 11 (7.0) | 8 (12.7) | 1.931 (0.74–5.05) | 0.180 | ||
| Coronary artery disease | 37 (16.8) | 23 (14.6) | 14 (22.2) | 1.665 (0.79–3.49) | 0.177 | ||
| Persistent atrial fibrillation | 144 (65.5) | 82 (52.2) | 62 (98.4) | 56.71 (7.7–419.1) | < 0.0001 | 41.309 (5.34–319.48) | < 0.0001 |
| LV dysfunction (LVEF < 45%) | 17 (7.7) | 10 (6.4) | 7 (11.1) | 1.837 (0.67–5.06) | 0.239 | ||
| LVEDD (mm) | 51.1 (4.4) | 51.2 (4.5) | 50.9 (4.3) | 0.981 (0.92–1.05) | 0.564 | ||
| LA dilatation (> 40 mm) | 173 (78.6) | 115 (73.2) | 58 (92.1) | 4.237 (1.59–11.28) | 0.004 | 2.221 (0.69–7.15) | 0.181 |
| Creatinine clearance (ml/min/1.73 sqm) | 78.3 (15.1) | 80.1 (14.7) | 73.8 (15.2) | 0.972 (0.95–0.99) | 0.006 | 0.997 (0.97–1.02) | 0.789 |
| Cumulative area < 0.5 mV (sqcm) | 6.1 (12.0) | 0.8 (1.3) | 19.2 (16.0) | n/a | |||
| cumulative area < 1.0 mV (sqcm) | 15.2 (21.1) | 5.0 (6.2) | 40.5 (23.5) | n/a | |||
FAM, fibrotic atrial myopathy (prespecified as ≥ 5 cm2 with bipolar voltage < 0.5 mV); LA, left atrial; LV, left ventricle; LVEDD, left-ventricular end-diastolic diameter
Values are given as mean ± standard deviation or n (%)
Fig. 1Age-related development of fibrotic atrial myopathy. Shown is the cumulative area with bipolar voltages < 0.5 mV per patient vs. patient age in the derivation cohort (A). Panel (B) gives the mean and standard error of cumulative areas with voltages < 0.5 mV in age-categories spanning 5 years each. The percentage of patients within each given age group meeting the prespecified criterion for FAM (≥ 5 cm2 low-voltage areas at < 0.5 mV) is shown in (C). FAM, fibrotic atrial myopathy
Fig. 2Clinical AF-phenotype and age-dependency of fibrotic atrial myopathy. Shown is the cumulative area with bipolar voltages < 0.5 mV per patient vs. patient age in the derivation cohort, grouped for paroxysmal AF (blue) or persistent AF (red, Panel A). Panel (B) gives the mean and standard error of cumulative areas with voltages < 0.5 mV in age-categories spanning 5 years each separated for paroxysmal AF (blue) or persistent AF (red). The percentage of patients within a given age group meeting the prespecified criterion for FAM (≥ 5 cm2 low-voltage areas at < 0.5 mV) in the respective groups is shown in (C). AF, atrial fibrillation; FAM, fibrotic atrial myopathy
Fig. 3Impact of sex on fibrotic atrial myopathy. The cumulative area with voltages < 0.5 mV in individual patients in the derivation cohort vs. patient age and sex (females in red, males in blue) is shown in the large Panel. The inlay demonstrates the percentage of females and males meeting the prespecified criterion for FAM (≥ 5 cm2 low-voltage areas at < 0.5 mV)
Fig. 4Sex and AF-phenotype determine fibrotic atrial myopathy in advanced age. The large panel shows the distribution of areas with bipolar voltages < 0.5 mV in the derivation cohort in women (red), men (blue) with paroxysmal (circles) and persistent AF (triangles). The small panel compares the extent of low-voltage areas between sexes and AF-phenotype restricted to patients aged ≥ 60 years. AF, atrial fibrillation
Fig. 5Determination of AF-SCORE. AF-SCORE is determined using patient age, sex, and clinical phenotype of AF. Patient age ≥ 60 years constitutes 1 point. Female sex (+ 1 point) and persistency of AF (+ 2 points) are added in patients aged ≥ 60 years. AF, atrial fibrillation
Fig. 6Diagnostic and prognostic properties of AF-SCORE. Receiver-operating-curve analysis of AF-SCORE for presence of FAM (≥ 5 cm2 low-voltage areas at < 0.5 mV) in the derivation cohort is given in (A). The absolute cumulative area with voltages < 0.5 mV with regard to AF-SCORE is given in (B). The percentage of patients with FAM, defined as cumulative areas with bipolar voltages < 0.5 mV of > 5 cm2 in relation to AF-SCORE, is shown in (C). Kaplan–Meier-estimates of arrhythmia-free survival following pulmonary vein isolation without additional left- or right-atrial ablations depending on AF-SCORE in the outcome-validation cohort is shown in (D). AUC, area under curve, HR, hazard ratio