Pulsed-field ablation (PFA) is an emerging technology associated with dose-dependent hemolysis as a recently recognized side effect. This study aimed to compare hemolysis levels and assess dose-dependency across three PFA systems: a pentaspline catheter (PSC), a lattice-tip focal catheter (LTFC), and a variable loop circular catheter (VLCC). Patients treated for atrial arrhythmias with the LTFC (n = 29) or the VLCC (n = 30) were included from a prospective registry. A matched cohort of patients treated with the PSC (n = 28) was recruited from the same registry. Creatinine levels and markers of hemolysis were measured pre-ablation and 1 day postablation. Haptoglobin levels decreased significantly more with the PSC and VLCC compared to the LTFC (-0.65 -0.76, -0.49 g/L; -0.56 -0.78, -0.43 g/L, -0.21 -0.32, -0.1 g/L, respectively; p < 0.001 for both). Per-application decreases in haptoglobin also differed (-17.5 -20.38, -13.58 mg/L, -24.35 -36.36, -17.92 mg/L, -3.61 -5.98, -2.13 mg/L, respectively; p < 0.001 for both). There was no significant difference in haptoglobin decrease between the PSC and VLCC per procedure (p = 1.0). Haptoglobin decrease per application was significantly larger with the VLCC compared to the PSC (p = 0.0048). Per procedure LDH increase followed a similar trend (49 18, 81.25 U/L; 14 6, 60 U/L; 13 -4, 46 U/L; respectively; p = 0.037). No hemolysis-related complications were observed. Hemolysis levels vary significantly among PFA platforms. Focal PFA catheters induce less hemolysis per procedure and application compared to large-footprint catheters.
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J Bruss
Thomas Kueffer
Hildegard Tanner
University of Bern
University Hospital of Bern
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Bruss et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/689dfe97d61984b91e13c0f8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/jce.70049