Detection of brain lesions after catheter ablation depends on imaging criteria: insights from AXAFA-AFNET 5 trial
EP Europace Journal

Abstract
Left atrial catheter ablation is well established in patients with symptomatic atrial fibrillation (AF) but associated with risk of embolism to the brain. The present analysis aims to assess the impact of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) slice thickness on the rate of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)–detected ischaemic brain lesions after ablation.
AXAFA-AFNET 5 trial (NCT02227550) participants underwent MRI using high-resolution (hr) DWI (slice thickness: 2.5–3 mm) and standard DWI (slice thickness: 5–6 mm) within 3–48 h after ablation. In 321 patients with analysable brain MRI (mean age 64 years, 33% female, median CHA2DS2-VASc 2), hrDWI detected at least one acute brain lesion in 84 (26.2%) patients and standard DWI in 60 (18.7%;
The pre-specified AXAFA-AFNET 5 sub-analysis revealed significantly increased rates of MRI-detected acute brain lesions using hrDWI instead of standard DWI in AF patients undergoing ablation. In comparison to DWI slice thickness, MRI field strength had a no significant impact in the trial. Comparing the varying rates of ablation-related MRI-detected brain lesions across previous studies has to consider these technical parameters. Future studies should use hrDWI, as feasibility was demonstrated in the multicentre AXAFA-AFNET 5 trial.
Contributors

Felizitas A Eichner
Author

Peter U Heuschmann
Author

Jochen B Fiebach
Author

Tobias Engelhorn
Author

David Callans
Author

Philippe Debruyne
Author

Gerhard Hindricks
Author

Hussein R Al-Khalidi
Author

Won Yong Kim
Author

Jonathan P Piccini
Author

Ulrich Schotten
Author

Sakis Themistoclakis
Author

Luigi Di Biase
Author
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