Personalized pulmonary vein isolation guided by left atrial wall thickness for persistent atrial fibrillation ablation: the PeAF-by-LAWT randomized trial

EP Europace Journal

6 August 2025
Organised by: Logo
ESC Journals Interventional Cardiology

Abstract

AbstractAims

A personalized pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) approach aimed at ablation index (AI) titration according to multidetector computed tomography-derived left atrial wall thickness (LAWT) maps reported high effectiveness and efficiency outcomes for persistent atrial fibrillation (PeAF) ablation. To date, no randomized trials have compared this approach with the standard CLOSE protocol. This non-inferiority randomized controlled trial sought to compare a LAWT-guided PVI with CLOSE protocol-based for PeAF (NCT05396534).

Methods and results

Consecutive patients referred for first-time PeAF ablation were randomized on a 1:1 basis. In the by-LAWT arm, the AI was titrated according to local LAWT, and the ablation line was personalized to avoid the thickest regions at the pulmonary vein antrum. In the CLOSE arm, LAWT information was not available to the operator; the ablation was performed according to the CLOSE study settings: AI is ≥400 at the posterior wall and ≥550 at the anterior wall. Primary endpoint was freedom from atrial arrhythmias recurrence. Secondary endpoints were the major complication rate, procedure time, radiofrequency time, and first-pass PVI rate. One hundred fifty-six patients were included. At 12 month follow-up, no significant difference occurred in atrial arrhythmia-free survival between groups (P = 0.50). In the by-LAWT group, a significant reduction in procedure time (60.5 vs. 80.0 min; P < 0.01) and RF time (14.4 vs. 28.6 min; P < 0.01) was observed. No difference was observed regarding first-pass PVI (P = 0.72) and the major complication rate (P = 0.99).

Conclusions

The PeAF-by-LAWT trial is the first prospective randomized study to demonstrate that a personalized LAWT-guided PVI for PeAF ablation is non-inferior to the standard CLOSE protocol in terms of arrhythmia-free survival while significantly improving procedural efficiency. The study was not powered to detect differences in safety outcomes.

Contributors

Alessia Chiara Latini
Alessia Chiara Latini

Author

Clinical Institute Humanitas IRCCS Rozzano , Italy

Pietro Francia
Pietro Francia

Author

Sapienza University of Rome Rome , Italy

Andrea Saglietto
Andrea Saglietto

Author

University of Turin Turin , Italy

Stefano Valcher
Stefano Valcher

Author

Humanitas Research Hospital Rozzano , Italy

Francesco Amata
Francesco Amata

Author

Clinical Institute Humanitas IRCCS Rozzano , Italy

Lucio Teresi
Lucio Teresi

Author

G. Martino University Hospital Messina , Italy

Julio Martí-Almor
Julio Martí-Almor

Author

Teknon Medical Centre Barcelona , Spain

Antonio Berruezo
Antonio Berruezo

Author

Teknon Medical Centre Barcelona , Spain

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