| Literature DB >> 35956155 |
Ursula Rohrer1, Martin Manninger1, Andreas Zirlik1, Daniel Scherr1.
Abstract
Atrial fibrillation is the most common sustained cardiac arrhythmia in adults. It is a complex arrhythmia leading to increased morbidity and mortality requiring thorough assessment and classification to guide therapy and to assess whether to pursue rate or rhythm control therapy. To obtain rhythm control, several strategies are available with different advantages and disadvantages concerning success rate and safety. Apart from antiarrhythmic drugs, catheter ablation is a well-established invasive therapy to treat atrial fibrillation. As quality of life is a very important factor to pursue rhythm control, several studies investigated on the specific impact of catheter ablation on quality of life. Catheter ablation shows a beneficial effect on quality of life in paroxysmal and persistent atrial fibrillation independent of the timepoint and strategy of catheter ablation.Entities:
Keywords: atrial fibrillation; catheter ablation; pulmonary vein isolation; quality of life
Year: 2022 PMID: 35956155 PMCID: PMC9369868 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11154541
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Overview of QoL questionnaires.
| Name | Specifications | Studies Used | AF Specific | Validated |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) | Eight categories, scoring from 0 to 100 (vitality, physical functioning, bodily pain, general health perceptions, physical role functioning, emotional role functioning, social role functioning, mental health). Categories can be summarized in 2 groups: “physical component summary” (PCS) and “mental component summary” (MCS). | [ | No | Yes |
| EuroQol Five Dimension Questionnaire (EQ5D) | Five dimensions of health state: mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, anxiety/depression. Can be used to analyze cost-effectiveness. | CABANA trial [ | no | yes |
| AF effect on Quality-of-Life Survey (AFEQT) | 20 AF specific questions regarding symptoms, general daily activities, and treatment concerns | CABANA trial [ | yes | yes |
| Mayo AF-Specific Symptom Inventory (MAFSI) | Evaluation of severity and frequency of AF related symptoms (10 categories) | CABANA trial [ | Yes | yes |
| Duke Activity Status Index (DASI) | Assessment of functional capacity in cardiovascular diseases with 12 questions (0 to 58.2 points) | CABANA trial [ | No | yes |
| Quality of Life Questionnaire for Patients with AF (AFQoL) | 18 questions analyzing psychological, physical, and sexual aspects of daily life | SARA study [ | yes | yes |
| University of Toronto Atrial Fibrillation Severity Scale (AFSS) | 10 categories to assess symptom burden and severity | CTAF trial [ | Yes | yes |
| Arrhythmia-Specific Questionnaire in Tachycardia and Arrhythmia (ASTA) | Assessment of symptom and arrhythmia burden and 10 symptoms scored from 1 to 4 | MANTRA-PAF [ | yes | yes |
| Arrhythmia-Related Symptom Checklist (SCL) | 16 questions regarding symptom burden and severity of AF | A4 study [ | yes | yes |
| Minnesota Living with Heart Failure (MLwHF) questionnaire | 2 equally scored items (physical and emotional dimension); total scores | PABA-CHF [ | No | yes |
Studies concerning the impact of catheter ablation on QoL in paroxysmal AF (RF-PVI: radiofrequency-pulmonary vein isolation, AAD: antiarrhythmic drug, RCT: randomized controlled trial, PAF: paroxysmal atrial fibrillation, persAF: persistent atrial fibrillation).
| Name of Study | Study Design | Setup | Pat. | QoL Assessment | QoL Improvement after Catheter Ablation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O.M. Wazni et al. 2005 [ | Prospective, multicenter RCT | RF-PVI vs. AAD—first line (PAF; single persAF) | 70 | SF-36 | Better in 5/8 categories ( |
| A4 study, P. Jais et al. 2008 [ | Prospective, multicenter RCT | RF-PVI + extra lines vs. AAD—second line (PAF) | 112 | SF-36, SCL | PCS and MCS better ( |
| ThermoCool AF Trial, D.J. Wilber et al., M.R. Reynolds, 2010 [ | Prospective, multicenter, RCT | RF-PVI vs. AAD—second line (PAF) | 167 | SF-36, SCL | PCS, MCS, symptom and severity of AF improved ( |
| RAAFT2, C.A. Morillo et al. 2014 [ | Prospective, multicenter, RCT | RF-PVI vs. AAD—first line, (PAF) | 127 | EQ-5D | All dimensions improved, not significant between groups ( |
| MANTRA PAF—subanalysis, H. Walfridsson 2014 [ | Prospective, multicenter, RCT | RF-PVI as first line vs. AAD, (PAF) | 294 | SF-36, EQ-5D, ASTA | Better in 4/8 categories of SF-36 ( |
| CAPTAF, C. Blomström-Lundqvist, 2019 [ | Prospective, multicenter, RCT | RF-PVI as second line vs. AAD, (PAF) | 155 | SF-36 | Significantly better ( |
| CABANA, D.B. Mark, 2019 [ | Prospective, multicenter, RCT | RF-PVI as second line vs. AAD, (PAF) | 2204 | SF-36, EQ-5D, AFEQT, MAFSI, DASI, AFSS | Improvement in all questionnaires ( |
Studies concerning the impact of catheter ablation on QoL in persistent AF (CFAE: complex fractionated atrial electrograms, CRT: cardiac resynchronization therapy, LSP: long-standing persistent atrial fibrillation).
| Name of Study | Study Design | Setup | Pat. | QoL Assessment | QoL Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PABA-CHF trial, M.N. Khan, 2009 [ | Prospective, multicenter, RCT | PVI vs. AV-node ablation and CRT-Implantation (persAF) | 41 | MLwHF | Favors catheter ablation ( |
| SARA study, L. Mont et al., 2014 [ | Prospective, multicenter, RCT | RF-PVI vs. AAD, (PersAF) | 146 | AF-QoL questionnaire | No difference between groups ( |
| V. Bulkova et al., 2014 [ | Prospective, multicenter, RCT | Catheter ablation in PAF vs. LSP-AF | 387 | EQ-5D | Better improvement in LSP-AF than in PAF ( |
| S. Mohanty et al., 2014 [ | Single-center, single arm prospective study | PVI+ CFAE + non-PV-trigger in asymptomatic LSP-AF | 61 | SF-36 | No control group; QoL improvement over time |
| STAR AF, R. Mantovan et al., 2013 [ | Prospective, multicenter, RCT | CFAE vs. PVI vs. CFAE + PVI combined in PAF and persAF | 100 | SF-36 | No difference between groups, significant improvement ( |