Antiarrhythmic drug therapy after AV junction ablation and pacing reduced the risk of developing permanent atrial fibrillation compared to no antiarrhythmic therapy (21% vs 37%, P=0.02).
RCT (n=137)
randomized
Sí
Does antiarrhythmic drug therapy reduce the development of permanent atrial fibrillation in patients with severely symptomatic paroxysmal atrial fibrillation after AV junction ablation and pacing?
While antiarrhythmic therapy reduces the risk of permanent atrial fibrillation after AV junction ablation and pacing, it does not improve quality of life and is associated with increased heart failure episodes and hospitalizations.
Estimación del efecto: 57% risk reduction
Tasa de eventos absoluta: 21% vs 37%
valor p: p=0.02
AIMS: Permanent atrial fibrillation develops in many patients after ablation and pacing therapy. We compared a strategy that initially allowed patients to remain in atrial fibrillation with a strategy that initially attempted to restore and maintain sinus rhythm. METHODS AND RESULTS: In this multicentre randomized controlled trial, 68 patients affected by severely symptomatic paroxysmal atrial fibrillation were assigned, after successful atrioventricular junction ablation and pacing treatment, to antiarrhythmic drug therapy with amiodarone, propafenone, flecainide or sotalol and were compared with 69 patients assigned, after successful AV junction ablation and pacing treatment, to no antiarrhythmic drug therapy. The patients were followed-up for 12 to 24 months (mean 16+/-4). The drug arm patients had a 57% reduction in the risk of developing permanent atrial fibrillation (21% vs 37%, P=0.02). Evaluation after 12 months revealed similar quality of life scores and echocardiographic parameters in the two groups, but the drug arm patients had more episodes of heart failure and hospitalizations (P=0.05). The outcome was similar between the 40 patients who developed permanent atrial fibrillation and the 97 who did not. CONCLUSION: Conventional antiarrhythmic therapy reduces the risk of development of permanent atrial fibrillation after ablation and pacing therapy. The present data do not support the concept that the development of permanent atrial fibrillation is related to an adverse outcome when a perfect control of heart rate is obtained by ablation and pacing.
Michele Brignole (Sat,) conducted a rct in severely symptomatic paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (n=137). Antiarrhythmic drug therapy (amiodarone, propafenone, flecainide or sotalol) vs. No antiarrhythmic drug therapy was evaluated on Development of permanent atrial fibrillation (57% risk reduction, p=0.02). Antiarrhythmic drug therapy after AV junction ablation and pacing reduced the risk of developing permanent atrial fibrillation compared to no antiarrhythmic therapy (21% vs 37%, P=0.02).
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: