Hybrid Therapy and Heart Team for Atrial Fibrillation
Comparison of the Efficacy of Hybrid Ablative Therapy for Patients with Persistent Atrial Fibrillation Versus Conventional Catheter Ablation
About This Trial
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common cardiac arrhythmia with a prevalence ranging from 5% over 60 years old to 17% after 85 years old. Besides hemodynamical compromises and occurrence of heart failure, stroke remains the most feared complication related to AF with a risk increased by 5-fold. Catheter ablation with the aim of pulmonary veins isolation (PVI) has evolved as a standardized treatment option in paroxysmal AF (PAF), supported by the current guidelines. However, due to advanced electrical and structural remodeling, catheter ablation for persistent AF is rather disappointing with a limited success rate, at least after a single procedure. Due to these shortcomings, minimally invasive thoracoscopic surgical techniques have gained attention with good results in persistent AF patients. Comparison between thoracoscopic surgical ablation and catheter ablation have shown that surgical ablation was associated with higher success rates, less redo procedures but also with higher complication rates. The main issue with surgical ablation is the difficulty to check the ablation lines and pulmonary vein isolation, which are the cornerstones for achieving good long-term results. Hybrid therapy, combining both epicardial surgical and endocardial catheter ablation is expected to be the most effective technique. It would avoid incomplete lesions or incomplete pulmonary vein isolation, and would provide complete lesion set. Hybrid therapy of AF has been compared with mini-invasive surgical ablation of AF, showing a significant higher rate of sinus rhythm achievement in the hybrid therapy group. However, no comparative clinical trials data are currently available in the setting of persistent AF comparing hybrid ablation and conventional catheter ablation.
Who May Be Eligible (Plain English)
Original Eligibility Criteria
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Treatments Being Tested
Hybrid ablation
In the hybrid ablation arm, the epicardial surgical ablation procedure will be combined with percutaneous endocardial catheter ablation procedure in a single step procedure (same operative time). During the endocardial approach, the isolation of the pulmonary veins and the posterior box will be checked and completed if necessary. Then additional ablation will be performed for atrial tachycardia or ongoing persisting atrial fibrillation (AF) according the same lesions setup or stepwise protocol than the conventional arm
Percutaneous catheter ablation
In the percutaneous catheter ablation arm, the procedure will be performed according to the current guidelines (pulmonary vein isolation, linear ablation and fragmented potentials ablation if needed, with the achievement of sinus rhythm during the procedure being the optimal endpoint. Any atrial tachycardia will be mapped and ablated as well (DC shock performed otherwise).