Pentaspline PFA catheter yielded similar one-year clinical effectiveness (≥75: 77.0% vs <75: 78.9%; p=0.90) and safety in elderly AF patients compared to younger patients.
Does pulsed field ablation using the pentaspline catheter provide similar clinical effectiveness and safety in elderly patients (≥75 years) compared to younger patients (<75 years) with atrial fibrillation?
Pulsed field ablation using a pentaspline catheter demonstrates similar one-year clinical effectiveness and acute safety in elderly patients (≥75 years) compared to younger patients with atrial fibrillation.
Tasa de eventos absoluta: 0% vs 0%
Abstract Background The prevalence of atrial fibrillation (AF) significantly increases with age. Approaches for managing AF in the elderly patient population are limited, and thermal catheter ablation in this population is generally associated with more complications and a higher rate of arrhythmia recurrence when compared to younger populations receiving treatment. Further, the elderly population has more therapeutic consideration for managing AF with catheter ablation, including more comorbidities complex anatomy, and sensitivity to anesthesia. Pulsed field ablation (PFA) may provide an alternative ablation option given the efficient procedure times and favorable safety profile. To date, limited evidence exists on the clinical outcomes of elderly patients as they generally are not included or are underrepresented in clinical trials Purpose Evaluate long-clinical effectiveness in elderly patients treated using the pentaspline PFA catheter. Methods FARADISE is a prospective, global registry that enrolled subjects clinically indicated for an AF ablation procedure using the pentaspline PFA catheter. Procedural characteristics, acute safety, and one-year clinical effectiveness, defined as freedom from AF/atrial flutter/atrial tachycardia recurrence, cardioversion, and repeat ablation, were collected and compared between patients ≥75 years old versus patients 75 years old. Results In total, 1160 patients were treated with the pentaspline PFA catheter. Grouped by age at the time of ablation, 158 (13.6%) subjects were ≥75 years old. The older patients were more frequently female (52.5% vs 30.0%; p0.01), had higher rates of comorbidities including ischemic cardiomyopathy (7.6% vs 3.7%; p=0.02), myocardial infarction (7.0% vs 3.4%; p=0.03), COPD (7.0% vs 2.9%; p=0.01), and renal disease (11.4% vs 4.7%; p0.01), and more often diagnosed with persistent AF (42.0% vs 31.2%; p0.01). The elderly patient cohort more often had pulmonary vein (PV) isolation with additional extra-PV ablations (39.5% vs 25.5%, p 0.01). Procedure and fluoroscopy times did not differ between groups despite differences in overall ablation strategy between groups. Early onset device- or procedure-related SAEs were reported in 4 patients in the elderly group versus 12 patients in the younger group (2.5% vs 1.2%; p = 0.18). To date, 659 (65.8%) patients 75 years old and 103 (65.2%) patients ≥75 years old have completed one-year follow-up. There was no difference in the Kaplan-Meier estimates for clinical effectiveness (≥75: 77.0% vs 75: 78.9%, p=0.90) Conclusion In the FARADISE registry, procedural and one-year clinical outcomes were similar between patients ≥75 years old versus patients 75 years old. Acute safety event rates were not significantly larger in the elderly cohort. Notably, long-term clinical effectiveness remained similar for elderly patients compared with the younger cohort treated with the pentaspline PFA catheter.
Russo et al. (Sat,) reported a other. Pentaspline PFA catheter yielded similar one-year clinical effectiveness (≥75: 77.0% vs <75: 78.9%; p=0.90) and safety in elderly AF patients compared to younger patients.