Cargando…

Ablation versus anti-arrhythmic therapy for reducing all hospital episodes from recurrent atrial fibrillation: a prospective, randomized, multi-centre, open label trial

AIMS: There is rising healthcare utilization related to the increasing incidence and prevalence of atrial fibrillation (AF) worldwide. Simplifying therapy and reducing hospital episodes would be a valuable development. The efficacy of a streamlined AF ablation approach was compared to drug therapy a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kanagaratnam, Prapa, McCready, James, Tayebjee, Muzahir, Shepherd, Ewen, Sasikaran, Thiagarajah, Todd, Derick, Johnson, Nicholas, Kyriacou, Andreas, Hayat, Sajad, Hobson, Neil A, Mann, Ian, Balasubramaniam, Richard, Whinnett, Zachary, Earley, Mark, Petkar, Sanjiv, Veasey, Rick, Kirubakaran, Senthil, Coyle, Clare, Kim, Min-Young, Lim, Phang Boon, O’Neill, James, Davies, D Wyn, Peters, Nicholas S, Babalis, Daphne, Linton, Nicholas, Falaschetti, Emanuela, Tanner, Mark, Shah, Jaymin, Poulter, Neil
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10062288/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36576323
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/europace/euac253
_version_ 1785017460480540672
author Kanagaratnam, Prapa
McCready, James
Tayebjee, Muzahir
Shepherd, Ewen
Sasikaran, Thiagarajah
Todd, Derick
Johnson, Nicholas
Kyriacou, Andreas
Hayat, Sajad
Hobson, Neil A
Mann, Ian
Balasubramaniam, Richard
Whinnett, Zachary
Earley, Mark
Petkar, Sanjiv
Veasey, Rick
Kirubakaran, Senthil
Coyle, Clare
Kim, Min-Young
Lim, Phang Boon
O’Neill, James
Davies, D Wyn
Peters, Nicholas S
Babalis, Daphne
Linton, Nicholas
Falaschetti, Emanuela
Tanner, Mark
Shah, Jaymin
Poulter, Neil
author_facet Kanagaratnam, Prapa
McCready, James
Tayebjee, Muzahir
Shepherd, Ewen
Sasikaran, Thiagarajah
Todd, Derick
Johnson, Nicholas
Kyriacou, Andreas
Hayat, Sajad
Hobson, Neil A
Mann, Ian
Balasubramaniam, Richard
Whinnett, Zachary
Earley, Mark
Petkar, Sanjiv
Veasey, Rick
Kirubakaran, Senthil
Coyle, Clare
Kim, Min-Young
Lim, Phang Boon
O’Neill, James
Davies, D Wyn
Peters, Nicholas S
Babalis, Daphne
Linton, Nicholas
Falaschetti, Emanuela
Tanner, Mark
Shah, Jaymin
Poulter, Neil
author_sort Kanagaratnam, Prapa
collection PubMed
description AIMS: There is rising healthcare utilization related to the increasing incidence and prevalence of atrial fibrillation (AF) worldwide. Simplifying therapy and reducing hospital episodes would be a valuable development. The efficacy of a streamlined AF ablation approach was compared to drug therapy and a conventional catheter ablation technique for symptom control in paroxysmal AF. METHODS AND RESULTS: We recruited 321 patients with symptomatic paroxysmal AF to a prospective randomized, multi-centre, open label trial at 13 UK hospitals. Patients were randomized 1:1:1 to cryo-balloon ablation without electrical mapping with patients discharged same day [Ablation Versus Anti-arrhythmic Therapy for Reducing All Hospital Episodes from Recurrent (AVATAR) protocol]; optimization of drug therapy; or cryo-balloon ablation with confirmation of pulmonary vein isolation and overnight hospitalization. The primary endpoint was time to any hospital episode related to treatment for atrial arrhythmia. Secondary endpoints included complications of treatment and quality-of-life measures. The hazard ratio (HR) for a primary endpoint event occurring when comparing AVATAR protocol arm to drug therapy was 0.156 (95% CI, 0.097–0.250; P < 0.0001 by Cox regression). Twenty-three patients (21%) recorded an endpoint event in the AVATAR arm compared to 76 patients (74%) within the drug therapy arm. Comparing AVATAR and conventional ablation arms resulted in a non-significant HR of 1.173 (95% CI, 0.639–2.154; P = 0.61 by Cox regression) with 23 patients (21%) and 19 patients (18%), respectively, recording primary endpoint events (P = 0.61 by log-rank test). CONCLUSION: The AVATAR protocol was superior to drug therapy for avoiding hospital episodes related to AF treatment, but conventional cryoablation was not superior to the AVATAR protocol. This could have wide-ranging implications on how demand for AF symptom control is met. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinical Trials Registration: NCT02459574.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10062288
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-100622882023-03-31 Ablation versus anti-arrhythmic therapy for reducing all hospital episodes from recurrent atrial fibrillation: a prospective, randomized, multi-centre, open label trial Kanagaratnam, Prapa McCready, James Tayebjee, Muzahir Shepherd, Ewen Sasikaran, Thiagarajah Todd, Derick Johnson, Nicholas Kyriacou, Andreas Hayat, Sajad Hobson, Neil A Mann, Ian Balasubramaniam, Richard Whinnett, Zachary Earley, Mark Petkar, Sanjiv Veasey, Rick Kirubakaran, Senthil Coyle, Clare Kim, Min-Young Lim, Phang Boon O’Neill, James Davies, D Wyn Peters, Nicholas S Babalis, Daphne Linton, Nicholas Falaschetti, Emanuela Tanner, Mark Shah, Jaymin Poulter, Neil Europace Clinical Research AIMS: There is rising healthcare utilization related to the increasing incidence and prevalence of atrial fibrillation (AF) worldwide. Simplifying therapy and reducing hospital episodes would be a valuable development. The efficacy of a streamlined AF ablation approach was compared to drug therapy and a conventional catheter ablation technique for symptom control in paroxysmal AF. METHODS AND RESULTS: We recruited 321 patients with symptomatic paroxysmal AF to a prospective randomized, multi-centre, open label trial at 13 UK hospitals. Patients were randomized 1:1:1 to cryo-balloon ablation without electrical mapping with patients discharged same day [Ablation Versus Anti-arrhythmic Therapy for Reducing All Hospital Episodes from Recurrent (AVATAR) protocol]; optimization of drug therapy; or cryo-balloon ablation with confirmation of pulmonary vein isolation and overnight hospitalization. The primary endpoint was time to any hospital episode related to treatment for atrial arrhythmia. Secondary endpoints included complications of treatment and quality-of-life measures. The hazard ratio (HR) for a primary endpoint event occurring when comparing AVATAR protocol arm to drug therapy was 0.156 (95% CI, 0.097–0.250; P < 0.0001 by Cox regression). Twenty-three patients (21%) recorded an endpoint event in the AVATAR arm compared to 76 patients (74%) within the drug therapy arm. Comparing AVATAR and conventional ablation arms resulted in a non-significant HR of 1.173 (95% CI, 0.639–2.154; P = 0.61 by Cox regression) with 23 patients (21%) and 19 patients (18%), respectively, recording primary endpoint events (P = 0.61 by log-rank test). CONCLUSION: The AVATAR protocol was superior to drug therapy for avoiding hospital episodes related to AF treatment, but conventional cryoablation was not superior to the AVATAR protocol. This could have wide-ranging implications on how demand for AF symptom control is met. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinical Trials Registration: NCT02459574. Oxford University Press 2022-12-28 /pmc/articles/PMC10062288/ /pubmed/36576323 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/europace/euac253 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Clinical Research
Kanagaratnam, Prapa
McCready, James
Tayebjee, Muzahir
Shepherd, Ewen
Sasikaran, Thiagarajah
Todd, Derick
Johnson, Nicholas
Kyriacou, Andreas
Hayat, Sajad
Hobson, Neil A
Mann, Ian
Balasubramaniam, Richard
Whinnett, Zachary
Earley, Mark
Petkar, Sanjiv
Veasey, Rick
Kirubakaran, Senthil
Coyle, Clare
Kim, Min-Young
Lim, Phang Boon
O’Neill, James
Davies, D Wyn
Peters, Nicholas S
Babalis, Daphne
Linton, Nicholas
Falaschetti, Emanuela
Tanner, Mark
Shah, Jaymin
Poulter, Neil
Ablation versus anti-arrhythmic therapy for reducing all hospital episodes from recurrent atrial fibrillation: a prospective, randomized, multi-centre, open label trial
title Ablation versus anti-arrhythmic therapy for reducing all hospital episodes from recurrent atrial fibrillation: a prospective, randomized, multi-centre, open label trial
title_full Ablation versus anti-arrhythmic therapy for reducing all hospital episodes from recurrent atrial fibrillation: a prospective, randomized, multi-centre, open label trial
title_fullStr Ablation versus anti-arrhythmic therapy for reducing all hospital episodes from recurrent atrial fibrillation: a prospective, randomized, multi-centre, open label trial
title_full_unstemmed Ablation versus anti-arrhythmic therapy for reducing all hospital episodes from recurrent atrial fibrillation: a prospective, randomized, multi-centre, open label trial
title_short Ablation versus anti-arrhythmic therapy for reducing all hospital episodes from recurrent atrial fibrillation: a prospective, randomized, multi-centre, open label trial
title_sort ablation versus anti-arrhythmic therapy for reducing all hospital episodes from recurrent atrial fibrillation: a prospective, randomized, multi-centre, open label trial
topic Clinical Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10062288/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36576323
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/europace/euac253
work_keys_str_mv AT kanagaratnamprapa ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT mccreadyjames ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT tayebjeemuzahir ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT shepherdewen ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT sasikaranthiagarajah ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT toddderick ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT johnsonnicholas ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT kyriacouandreas ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT hayatsajad ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT hobsonneila ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT mannian ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT balasubramaniamrichard ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT whinnettzachary ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT earleymark ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT petkarsanjiv ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT veaseyrick ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT kirubakaransenthil ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT coyleclare ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT kimminyoung ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT limphangboon ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT oneilljames ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT daviesdwyn ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT petersnicholass ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT babalisdaphne ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT lintonnicholas ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT falaschettiemanuela ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT tannermark ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT shahjaymin ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial
AT poulterneil ablationversusantiarrhythmictherapyforreducingallhospitalepisodesfromrecurrentatrialfibrillationaprospectiverandomizedmulticentreopenlabeltrial