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Catheter Ablation Versus Thoracoscopic Surgical Ablation in Long Standing Persistent Atrial Fibrillation: CASA-AF Randomised Controlled Trial

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-09-03, 11:09 authored by Shouvik Haldar, Habib Rehman Khan, Vennela Boyalla, Ines Kralj-Hans, Simon Jones, Joanne Lord, Oluchukwu Onyimadu, Anitha Satishkumar, Toufan Bahrami, Anthony De Souza, Jonathan R Clague, Darrel P Francis, Wajid Hussain, Julian W Jarman, David Gareth Jones, Zhong Chen, Neeraj Mediratta, Jonathan Hyde, Michael Lewis, Raad Mohiaddin, Tushar V Salukhe, Caroline Murphy, Joanna Kelly, Rajdeep S Khattar, William Toff, Vias Markides, James McCready, Dhiraj Ghupta, Tom Wong, CASA-AF Investigators
Aims
Long-standing persistent atrial fibrillation (LSPAF) is challenging to treat with suboptimal catheter ablation (CA) outcomes. Thoracoscopic surgical ablation (SA) has shown promising efficacy in atrial fibrillation (AF). This multicentre randomized controlled trial tested whether SA was superior to CA as the first interventional strategy in de novo LSPAF.

Methods and results
We randomized 120 LSPAF patients to SA or CA. All patients underwent predetermined lesion sets and implantable loop recorder insertion. Primary outcome was single procedure freedom from AF/atrial tachycardia (AT) ≥30 s without anti-arrhythmic drugs at 12 months. Secondary outcomes included clinical success (≥75% reduction in AF/AT burden); procedure-related serious adverse events; changes in patients’ symptoms and quality-of-life scores; and cost-effectiveness. At 12 months, freedom from AF/AT was recorded in 26% (14/54) of patients in SA vs. 28% (17/60) in the CA group [OR 1.128, 95% CI (0.46–2.83), P = 0.83]. Reduction in AF/AT burden ≥75% was recorded in 67% (36/54) vs. 77% (46/60) [OR 1.13, 95% CI (0.67–4.08), P = 0.3] in SA and CA groups, respectively. Procedure-related serious adverse events within 30 days of intervention were reported in 15% (8/55) of patients in SA vs. 10% (6/60) in CA, P = 0.46. One death was reported after SA. Improvements in AF symptoms were greater following CA. Over 12 months, SA was more expensive and provided fewer quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) compared with CA (0.78 vs. 0.85, P = 0.02).

Conclusion
Single procedure thoracoscopic SA is not superior to CA in treating LSPAF. Catheter ablation provided greater improvements in symptoms and accrued significantly more QALYs during follow-up than SA.

Clinical Trial Registration
ISRCTN18250790 and ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02755688

History

Citation

European Heart Journal, ehaa658, https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehaa658

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

European Heart Journal

Pagination

ehaa658

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

issn

0195-668X

Acceptance date

2020-07-30

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2020-08-29

Language

en

Publisher version

https://academic.oup.com/eurheartj/advance-article/doi/10.1093/eurheartj/ehaa658/5898905

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