Long-term follow-up of persistent atrial fibrillation ablation using termination as a procedural endpoint
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Catheter ablation of long-lasting persistent atrial fibrillation (AF) has been performed with varying results using a combination of different techniques. Whether arrhythmia termination during ablation is associated with an improved clinical outcome is controversial.
In this prospective study, 153 consecutive patients (56 ± 10 years) underwent catheter ablation of persistent AF (25 ± 33 months) using a stepwise approach with the desired procedural endpoint being AF termination. Repeat ablation was performed for patients with recurrent AF or atrial tachycardia (AT) after a 1 month blanking period. A minimum follow-up of 12 months with repeated Holter monitoring was performed. Atrial fibrillation was terminated in 130 patients (85%). There was a lower incidence of AF in those patients in whom AF was terminated during the index procedure compared with those who had not (5 vs. 39%
Procedural termination of long-lasting AF by catheter ablation alone is associated with an improved outcome.
Contributors

Mark D. O'Neill
Author

Sébastien Knecht
Author

Pierre Jaïs
Author

Mélèze Hocini
Author

Yoshihide Takahashi
Author

Anders Jönsson
Author

Frédéric Sacher
Author

Seiichiro Matsuo
Author

Kang Teng Lim
Author

Leonardo Arantes
Author

Nicolas Derval
Author

Nicholas Lellouche
Author

Isabelle Nault
Author

Pierre Bordachar
Author

Jacques Clémenty
Author

Michel Haïssaguerre
Author

