Catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation in the young: insights from the German Ablation Registry

  • K R Julian Chun
  • Boris Schmidt
  • Karl-Heinz Kuck
  • Dietrich Andresen
  • Stefan Willems
  • Stefan G Spitzer
  • Ellen Hoffmann
  • Burghard Schumacher
  • Lars Eckardt
  • Karlheinz Seidl
  • Claus Jünger
  • Martin Horack
  • Johannes Brachmann
  • Jochen Senges

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Catheter ablation of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (PAF) has been suggested as first-line treatment for selected patients (pts). However, patient characteristics, procedural data, and complication rate in the group of young patients remain undetermined.

METHODS: The German Ablation Registry has been designed as a multi-center prospective registry. AF ablation data were collected from 51 German centers between March 2007 to September 2012 and 2 groups were defined (group A: ≤45 years, group B: >45 years). Data were analyzed according to patient characteristics, procedural data, and complications. To calculate differences between both groups CHI2 or Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon tests was utilized.

RESULTS: A total of 7243 patients undergoing AF ablation were included (group A: 593, 8.2 %; group B: 6650, 91.8 %). Male gender and PAF were significantly more often present in group A. Patient characteristic revealed decreased co-morbidities in the young. In both groups circumferential pulmonary vein isolation represented the procedural cornerstone, whereas substrate modification was significantly more often performed in group B. Procedure-, and fluoroscopy-time was similar but there was a shorter hospital stay and a favorable complication profile in the young. After 12 months AF recurrence and use of antiarrhythmic drugs were less common in group A.

CONCLUSION: The young AF ablation patient has typically paroxysmal AF and less comorbidities. In this group, catheter ablation of AF is associated with a lower major complication rate, shorter hospitalization, and a favorable clinical outcome.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1861-0684
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 06.2013
PubMed 23503755